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Featured Artist: Tony Lujan
CD Title: Tribute
Year: 2004
Record Label: Bella Records
Style: Latin Jazz / Latin Funk
Musicians: Tony Lujan (trumpet, flugelhorn),
Yosvanni Terry (tenor sax), Miguel Zenon (alto sax),
Conrad Herwig (trombone), Edsel Gomez (piano),
John Benitez (bass), Dafnis Prieto (drums), Richie
Flores (congas, bongo, shekere, shaker, guiro,
campana), Luisito Quintero (djembe, maracas, palo),
Robertito Quintero (cajon)
Felipe Salles (conductor); Laura Arpianinen, Anna
Basis, E.J. Lee, Eva Leon (violin); Elizabeth Jaffe,
Irena Momchilova (viola),. Ren Ariizumi (cello)
Review: Though born in New Mexico, where he first
started playing trumpet in his father's mariachi band,
Tony Lujan has developed the versatility, combined
with a feel for the numerous variations of Latin
music, to tackle the tradition of the trumpet masters
without imitating them. The way he does that through
his five arrangements on Tribute, as well as on the
others arranged by like-minded musicians, is by
delving into the rhythms implicit in the original
recordings and adapting them to diverse Latin genres
suggesting those genres' complexity and the
compositions' ability to excite.
Take Lee Morgan's "Ceora," for example. Starting
with Robertito Quintero's dramatic call for attention
on cajon, a hint of the excitement to follow surely is
contained within, but as soon as Quintero completes
the introduction, the feel of the piece changes
completely as the group moves into a meringue.
Once Lujan comes in with the melody, all of the
pieces fit, the hand drumming, the easy trumpet
lead, the signature vamp. And Morgan's well-known
composition is subsumed without effort into the Latin
meter affixed to it, as if it had been originally written
with it in mind. The trading of parts, the piece divided
into melodic fragments, works, particularly at the end
when "Ceora" concludes abruptly with the clamp of
the hi-hat.
Then there's Clifford Brown's "Daahoud," the next
number, which follows the same pattern of
percussiveness — which makes sense, since Lujan's
group includes 4 drummers and percussionists out of
ten — into a straight-ahead, but thrilling,
interpretation of the song. Lujan has no fear of hitting
the high notes for advancing the tune. Yet, Lujan
varies his insights about the adaptation of jazz
trumpet to Latin genres, for Clark Terry's "Sheba"
receives string treatment, as it's slowed into a
gorgeous bolero, which Lujan played muted. And
then on Lujan's composition, "Forever My Love," he
sets up the arrangement to conform to the Cuban
danzon tradition, complete with triple-tonguing
trumpet solo, Yosvanni Terry's unctuous tenor sax
contribution and the background strings.
While Miles Davis is represented by "Nardis" as
salsa, Dizzy Gillespie's spirit appears in the form of
"Tin Tin Dec)," the tentet sounding more like a big
band as Lujan changes the tempo of the piece in its
middle before the Afro-Cuban polyrhythms resume.
And "Tin Tin Deo" lets Lujan develop his own
inspiring solo, employing the entire range of his
instrument, and then to end the CD literally on a high
note. And what a high note it is! Right on pitch, with
absolute control of volume, and leaving the listener
wowed and wanting to hear more.
Tracks: Nardis, Intrepid Fox, Forever My Love,
Tomorrow's Destiny, Ceora, Daahoud, Sheba, Short
Story, Tin Tin Deo
Reviewed by: Don Williamson
© 2004 JazzReview.com®. All Rights Reserved.
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