by yoni » Sat Nov 12, 2005 7:37 pm
Cool thread. I agree with all here that speed can be very exciting, but too much of a "good thing" can be tiring, as when a player is "all over the place". Taste is key.
Since Giovanni has been discussed here, I want to write of my own "Giovanni experience", where I met the master...
We were both performing in a Saint Lucia Jazz Festival, 1993. Both of us performed with Luther Francois, a Caribbean Jazz living legend... monster saxophonist, multi-instrumentalist and amazing composer. Our gigs with Luther were in two seperate groups that Luther led. I played with his Caribbean Jazz quintet doing some of his wild original tunes - including one where he had me solo in 9/8 time. The other players flipped because of the nine, and because we hardly did any rehearsal (Luther likes it that way, even though his pieces can be very complex, with shifting time signatures and all...). Luckily, I was familiar enough with 9/8, having been in the Mid East for some years, where it's used kind of often.
Gio performed together with Luther and the "Latin Jazz All-Stars" which also included Hilton Ruiz, Andy Gonzales, the late Dave Valentin, Steve Berrios and one or two others whose names I forget now. They performed an hour-long epic piece of Luther's, "The Call". Also, very little rehearsal.
A day or two before the shows, Luther introduced me to Giovanni, whom he himself had just met. The giant was tiny, a head shorter than me and I'm pretty small. He had just a little pot belly then. His arms and legs looked to me a bit too long for the rest of him. A kid, he looked like. We shook hands, his felt like fine sandpaper.
On that same morning soon after we met, Luther, Gio and the "All Stars" did a benefit show for Saint Lucian schoolchildren. I watched from about ten or twelve rows back. It was the first time I got to see Giovanni blow. And boy, did he blow. Not only that, but you know how you or other players can stare at one point while concentrating? Well, the point Giovanni chose to stare at was me. Right through the whole show. I guess I turned several different colors during that show, and seemed to feel myself shrinking into my seat. Wow. I smiled back, and afterwards told him how amazing his performance was. I think inside I was thinking... "I'm never gonna touch a conga again".
I had lent him my bongos for that schoolkids' show and he really liked them and asked if he could use them for his show with Luther later in the festival. I said, "Sure! I got a quinto with me too if you want to use it also."
He did, and boy did he use them!
He was younger then and very,very fiery, and did a solo that was like a 5 minute double roll, with all kinds of twists and accents in it. This time the house was dark, so the focal point he chose to look at was onstage... he stared smiling at Luther the whole time. At the end of his solo he stopped so sudden, by whipping his hand up and cupping his chin, his elbow resting on the quinto, as if to say:"How's THAT?!". Still staring at Luther. But Luther's a stone-face, all his expression comes out in the horn, and he didn't flinch, or bat an eyelash. The audience screamed.
Later, Luther told me in his quiet way, "This Giovanni is a bitch, isn't he?"... meaning, of course, that Giovanni was the baddest conguero he had ever heard. I said, "No shit. The guy is like an idol to me. What a grand charge, to finally get to see, meet and hear him."
Since then Luther also worked with Richie Flores, with Gio again, with me again, and many others. I returned to Israel after living the three years back in the States when I was hired to play those Jazz Fests, the last one being in 1994 or '95. I apply techniques I learned from Gio, and other tricks, to the darbuka and dahola, as well as conga, but do play more darbuka and dahola these days.
I will of course never forget my encounter with Gio, a huge inspiration, and just wanted to tell my conga brothers here a bit about it.
All the best,
Yonatan
Edited By yoni on 1131992781