Ahmad Jamal - Macanudo
Released 1963
Recording and Session Information
Ahmad Jamal, piano; Art Davis, bass; Richard Evans, dirextor with large orchestra
RVG, Englewood, New York, December 20-21 1962
12087 Sugar loaf at twilight
12088 Montevideo
12089 Belo horizonte
12090 Bossa nova do Marilla
12091 Buenos Aires
12092 Bogota
12093 Haitian marketplace
12094 Carnival in Panama
Track Listing
Montevideo | Richard Evans | December 20-21 1962 |
Bogota | Richard Evans | December 20-21 1962 |
Sugar Load At Twilight | Richard Evans | December 20-21 1962 |
Haitian Market Place | Richard Evans | December 20-21 1962 |
Buenos Aires | Richard Evans | December 20-21 1962 |
Bossa Nova Do Marilla | Richard Evans | December 20-21 1962 |
Carnival In Panama | Richard Evans | December 20-21 1962 |
Belo Horizonte | Richard Evans | December 20-21 1962 |
Liner Notes
THIS IS A SPANISH slang word for "hip". It is very appropriate on this occasion for this album is a "hip" blending of the best rhythmic currents in Afro-Harlem and Afro-Latin American music. This album, in fact, is a justly-deserved tribute to President and Mrs. Jack Kennedy. It grew out of the President's cultural program which carried Composer Richard Evans to several South American countries as a musical ambassador and ended with an unprecedented White House jam session. Here. in eight impressionistic tone paintings of eight Latin American cities, is the musical result Of that cultural safari. If you are looking for hard-driving examples of the exciting rhythmic concoctions of Latin America, this is your record. If you are looking for gimmicky "fad" music, however, pass this one up. Ahmad Jamal, Richard Evans and their supporting cast on this brilliant album are to be commended for their good taste in avoiding the "fad" aspects of the contemporary Latin American movement. This is a record which doesn't try to prove anything—except that music is fun, from any part of the country.Ahmad Jamal, the driving force behind this album, is at home in Brazil. On the driving Haitian Market Place and the imaginative Buenos Aires, Jamal demonstrates that he has no peers in the art of piano magic. Coaxing great blocks of shimmering sound from the piano, the great pianist successfully defends his title as the most rhythmic and creative artist working on the keyboard today. On Sugar Loaf, incidentally, Jamal breaks new ground with an extraordinary solo on the celesta. As a musical host and as a recording director, I have followed Jamal's climb from Chicago's Pershing Lounge to the Himalaya of jazz. This is one of his best.
Richard Evans, the Chicago-based bassist who received long overdue recognition when he made the White House scene, blossoms forth on this album as a composer of note. Although he is only thirty, Evans has played and written for Maynard Ferguson, Dinah Washington and other musical greats. He served also as musical director of the Paul Winter sextet which made a six-month tour of Latin America and returned to Washington to make musical history as the first jazz group to give a concert at the White House.
Evans provides a colorful frame for the Jamal palette. Using jazz greats and conservatory-trained musicians from the New York Philharmonic and other symphony orchestras, he paints brilliant impressionistic portraits with strings, French horns, flutes and the harp and bell. Darting in and out of the splashes of sound, Jamal rises to great heights as an artist by dominating this large and impressive orchestra.
Jazztistically speaking, this is a record for the musical buff who has everything. It is one of those rare records that yield choice delights with repeated listening.
Here, in the swinging, uninhibited words of Composer Evans, is the musical fare: Montevideo — The capital of Uruguay is bright, fast and happy. A rolling eloquent recital by Ahmad Jamal delineates the modern and traditional in this great South American city.
Bogota — Bogota, Colombia, is paradox-ville. It is beautiful and beastly, hip and square, kind and cruel, old and new. Playing against the full orchestra, Jamal goes to the heart of the paradox.
Sugar Loaf — When you see the orange rays of the sun bathe Rio de Janeiro at twilight, you are filled with a feeling of peace which can best be defined with the soft tones of strings, celesta and French horn. The highlight of this tone painting is Jamal's lovely solo on the celesta.
Haitian Market Place — Imagine an open market in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, with hundreds of Haitians selling their wares and chanting in broken French. The pure African rhythms, the poverty and the soul combine to make you want to scream for them and moan with them. In this portrait, the brass screams and Jamal moans.
Buenos Aires — Argentina, the New York of South America, is so hip they call it B. A. The musical scene? No senoritas with guitars, no castanets, but some darn good modern jazz musicians who will send many North American jazz musicians back to the "wood shed." B. A. deserves undiluted jazz. B. A. deserves a sparkling Jamal solo.
Bona Nova Do Marilla — This number and the inventive Jamal interpolations capture the mood of the little out-of-the-way town of Marilla, Brazil. Here are the quiet, polite people, the pleasant little restaurant around the corner, the modest cemetery and the sheer beauty of Marilla's simplicity.
Carnival in Panama — Jamal sets the pace for this fast, rhythmical number with a percussive solo that shimmers and delights.
Belo Horizonte — This Brazilian city is smooth and relaxing. Bossa Nova is in order here with another pulsating Jamal solo and a Jamal-influenced ending.
Daddy-O Daylie
WAAF.WMAQ
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