Showing posts with label danzon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label danzon. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Season Update: Charanga Carolina

Charanga Carolina @ Festifall

Charanga Carolina is a UNC performing ensemble made up of students and guest artists from the community. Like a sports team, the roster varies year to year based on student enrollment and graduations. We're lucky to have a few key players back in Charanga this fall (Caity Bunch on flute, Alex Williams on piano, and Ryan Raven on trumpet, among others), as well as a whole new crop of student Charangueros.

Charanga Carolina @ Festifall

Charanga Carolina @ Festifall

Charanga Carolina @ Festifall

With more trumpets than trombones this semester, however, director David Garcia has rotated timba charts out of Charanga's book, for the time being. "To play Los Van Van, you really need the 3 trombones," David says.

What emerges stronger this season are the strings, with 5 strong players in the violin section. What better way to showcase this than by playing danzón, the original mainstay of the charanga orchestra, and the genre from which later developments such as the mambo and the cha cha chá emerged.

With its slower tempo and more classical sound, danzón may seem like a staid alternative, but it's an important building block in the history of Cuban music, and still forms the basis of many Latin jazz compositions to this day. Playing danzón well is challenging, because there's not much cover for the musicians, and its rhythmic shadings have their own subtle idiosyncrasies. Danzón builds slow, but the groove payoff in the end is large. Hear a modern echo in the cha-rock slowcookers of the 60s and 70s, songs like "Cocinando" ane "Oye Como Va"--based on rhythms that originated, in the way-back time, with danzón.



Charanga Carolina did an impressive job last Sunday, therefore, with their first public performance of this classic danzón "Angoa" at Chapel Hill's Festifall.

"That was the first time I've ever heard live danzón, and it made my day," said dance aficionada Amanda Jackson.

Other new charts in the book this season: an Arsenio Rodriguez son, "Blanca Paloma," and a conjoined version of "Guantanamo" and "Me Voy Pa' Moron." As a dancer, I can tell you these two-for-one charts are heaven to dance to. Thanks, Charanga! Keep up the good work.

Charanga Carolina @ Festifall

Next performance of CHARANGA CAROLINA:

Saturday, October 16 at 8:30 pm at Durham Academy's Fiesta Latina. Free and open to the public! Not only that, but your Fiesta Latina program will get you a discount at the door to see New York salsa band La Excelencia at Fred Astaire studio later that night, which is the official afterparty of DA Fiesta Latina.

Charanga Carolina @ Festifall

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Charanga Carolina to Headline Festifall TODAY

Charanga Carolina performs Sunday (10/3) at 4:45 pm on Franklin Street, near Graham Street intersection, on Festifall's Main Stage. The free outdoor arts festival runs through 6 pm today.

Charanga strings

Says director David Garcia:
"Our set list [Sunday] will include Cuban danzón and son as well as salsa from New York and Puerto Rico and merengue from La [Republica] Dominicana!"

Charanga @ CentralUNC's Charanga Carolina dir. David Garcia

Charanga Carolina already played their first concert of the fall season in September, at NC Central's Hispanic Heritage Month celebration. Here is the first public performance of one of their new charts this semester, Eddie Palmieri's "Lo Que Traigo Es Sabroso":



LINKS:

Festifall: http://www.townofchapelhill.org/index.aspx?page=513
Facebook event page: http://www.facebook.com/Festifall

Friday, October 3, 2008

Que Orquesta!

It seems obvious in retrospect. But who would have thought, that by pooling the resources of our university, high school, and professional musicians, that we could end up with such a truly grand orquesta, such as David Garcia has fashioned out of Charanga Carolina?

Some scenes from last night's performance at Durham Academy:
(Click on photos to see more)

Charangueate!

Garcia in action

Grand orquesta

fluteful improvisation

It's a beautiful experiment. I wish I could have played in a charanga when I was in high school! I wish I could have experienced the joy of Latin music when I was playing violin back then...I knew the intensity of Mahler, the ecstasy of Strauss, even the swing of Gershwin, but I didn't yet know clave, or danzon, or salsa. I envy these students!

An inspiration award goes to Bela Kussin, who had a leading hand in founding the Fiesta Latina at Durham Academy 3 years ago. Her invitation to Garcia and the Charanga to play there quickly led to collaboration, drawing DA student string players into the ensemble.

To see our local Latin musicians on stage with them is also a beautiful thing. Invited guests: Nelson Delgado and Ramon "Chino" Casiano, vocals, Andy Kleindienst (a Charanga alum), trombone, Alberto Carrasquillo, trumpet, Brevan Hampden, congas, Ramon Ortiz, timbales.

Coda:
As the crowd trailed out to catch the VP debate and stagehands wrapped electrical cords, Brevan and Ramon refused to give up the groove. I took a series of pictures of their impromptu descarga, this is the first:
after hours rumba series...
Watch the rumba heat up at my flickr stream by clicking on the photo.