Rating:
Genre:
Jazz
Release Date: 10/23/2007
Perhaps the greatest album that percussionist
Sabu Martinez ever issued is also one of the greatest
Latin jazz albums in history. The wild thing is, it isn't really a
Sabu date, despite his name listed as the bandleader on the LP.
Jazz Espagnole was really
Frankie Malangre's band. He was generous enough toward his bandmates to allow producer
Al Santiago to allow them to record with
Sabu (who had just come to New York from California and did not have his own band yet), who recorded the band's repertoire pretty much as a sideman on this 1960 date! In any case, what sets
Jazz Espagnole apart from virtually every other
Latin jazz date is that this music is neither a
Latin jazz album in that
Latin rhythms are superimposed over standard
jazz arrangements or a
jazz-
Latin album whose arrangements are subservient to
Latin rhythms. All 11 cuts are stomping, moving, steaming, and grooving
sambas,
descargas,
Afros,
boleros,
cha chas,
mambos,
sons, etc. The
jazz improvising that does take place is authentic, grooving harmonic interplay based on -- not against -- the rhythmic considerations and
fugue figures. Led by the percussion section of
Martinez,
Louie Ramirez, and
Ernie Newsum, trumpeter
Martry Sheller, saxophonist
Bobby Porcelli, pianist
Arty Jenkins, and bassist
Billy Salter tear through a selection that can deemed erroneously to be
salsa, but is actually a magnificent
Latin and
jazz fusion of the highest order. Most notable tracks are
"Delilah," "Otra Vez" with its 12/16 meter,
"I Remember Carmen" with its burning alto solos, and
"Nica's Dream" with its nocturnal, steamy rhythm built on a small
bop figure from the
Sonny Stitt book. This is the one.
~Thom Jurek, All Music Guide