by davidpenalosa » Fri Jun 22, 2007 7:44 pm
You are very welcome Jongo.
I’d like to add that although the Gillespie/Pozo collaborations are historically significant, they were by no means a smooth fusion of jazz and Cuban ideas. If you listen closely to those late 40’s recordings, it almost sounds like the rhythm section is fighting with itself. The jazzers were not yet comfortable with the “even-eighth” feel, let alone clave, of the Cuban son-based genres.
With obvious exceptions (like Cal Tjader), this awkwardness is evident in a lot of Latin jazz all the way up to the 70’s. For example, listen to Stan Kenton’s 1956 rendition of “The Peanut Vendor” (“Kenton In Hi-Fi”, Stan Kenton Blue Note CD 98451, 1956, reissued 1992).
Many jazz musicians liked to dabble in Latin jazz, but few cared to study the fundamentals of Cuban music. A watered-down Habanera feel (tresillo) is definitely there, as well as bossa nova and jazz samba patterns. These elements were mixed up randomly, more out of ignorance, than because of some experimental vision. I have several Latin jazz records where the conguero is playing a straight-up Cuban tumbao, while the bass and drums play bossa nova or jazz samba.
I was late to discover the music of Machito (under the direction of Mario Bauza). If you listen to the 1949 version of “Tanga”, (“Cubop City, Machito and his Afro-Cubans” Tumbao CD 012, 1949, re-issued 1992), you hear a true melding of jazz and the son. Bauza carefully chose a mix jazz and Latin musicians for the band in order to pull off his vision of Afro-Cuban jazz.
It wasn’t until the next generation, when musicians grew up playing both jazz and salsa, that I hear a true fusion of jazz and the son. The Gonzalez brother’s 80’s recordings were landmarks in this way. A lot of the jazz coming from Cuba at this time, still sounds awkward to me. By the 90’s though, Chucho and other Cuban musicians were playing fully integrated Latin jazz. However, they still had a tendency to overplay IMHO. When I was in Cuba in ’97, some Cuban jazz bands sounded like jazz parodies; it seemed to be a contest of who could play the fastest, busiest or highest.
By the way, awhile back I posted a new thread about the Cuban influence in early rock and roll: “Cuban influence in early R&R and R&B; tresillo, clave and the guajeo's impact”.
-David