Rubén Blades, a salsa legend, swings in a different direction: Jazz
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, November 21, 2024


Rubén Blades, a salsa legend, swings in a different direction: Jazz
Rubén Blades in New York, April 20, 2021. “Salswing!,” Blades's new project with the Panamanian big band leader Roberto Delgado, celebrates the connections between Afro-Cuban music and jazz. Chase Hall/The New York Times.

by Ed Morales



NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- Rubén Blades is a renowned vocalist, one of the emblematic singer-songwriters of 1970s salsa. But he’s not always recognized for his achievements in other disciplines: He’s also a Broadway and Hollywood actor, a composer, a Harvard Law School master’s graduate and a one-time candidate for president of his native Panama. And don’t ever say he can’t sing a swing tune like Frank Sinatra or Tony Bennett.

“We’re still segregated in many ways when it comes to music,” Blades, 72, said in a video conversation from his home in Manhattan. Outside of a few more wisps of gray in his beard, he hasn’t changed much, dressed in his typical all-black with an omnipresent porkpie hat. “People think, if you’re a salsero that’s what you’re going to do in your life. It’s like you’re a horse, racing with blinders on — I don’t wear those things. For me, music is subversive, because art is subversive. You change things.”

Blades’ ambitious new project with Panamanian big band leader Roberto Delgado celebrates the fruits of evolution and cultural blending: the connections between Afro-Cuban music and jazz. It has arrived over the course of April in three packages: “Salswing!,” an 11-track album that freely mixes salsa classics like “Paula C.” and “Tambó” with jazz standards like “Pennies From Heaven” and “The Way You Look Tonight”; and “Salsa Plus!” and “Swing!,” which emphasize the tracks from those genres.

Jazz has been flowing through Blades’ work for longer than many listeners realize. “Pedro Navaja,” arguably salsa’s most popular song, is best remembered as an unusually long piece that was initially frowned upon by the radio industry. According to Blades, a trio of heavyweight radio DJs told him that “Siembra,” the 1978 album it appears on, which he recorded with trombonist and arranger Willie Colón, would ruin Colón’s career. The song was actually derived from “Mack the Knife” from Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill’s “The Threepenny Opera.” Blades had been smitten by Bronx-born Bobby Darin’s hit rendition while growing up in Panama.

“I heard that version in 1959 — I really liked the feel of it, the attitude, the insolence,” Blades said.

Blades’ wife, Luba Mason, a similarly eclectic jazz singer he met when they both appeared in Paul Simon’s short-lived musical “The Capeman,” credits Blades’ mother, Anoland Díaz, with his passion for show music. “She loved the theater, playing the piano and singing,” she said. “I was a classical pianist for 13 years and when he heard that I think it sparked memories of her.”

While Blades’ interest in recording in English goes back to “Nothing but the Truth” from 1988, which featured collaborations with Elvis Costello, Lou Reed and Sting, the “Salswing!” project had its roots in a performance he did in November 2014 with Wynton Marsalis’ Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra.

“I’d always been drilling Wynton with Afro-Caribbean music and he started loving it more and more,” said Carlos Henriquez, the bassist and musical director of the orchestra’s cultural exchange with the Cuban Institute of Music in 2010. “So I told him, look, we could do this whole thing with Latin and swing, and the vocalist we should work with is Rubén Blades.”

For the 2014 show, which featured Blades singing Gershwin’s “They Can’t Take That Away From Me” alongside the Héctor Lavoe standard Blades wrote, “El Cantante,” he began to use the term “mixtura,” Spanish for mixture, as a kind of branding for Latino hybridity. Blades’ sense of mixture is emblematic of how many artists and intellectuals have viewed Latin American culture as a whole — a layered conglomeration of racial and cultural influences, an identity defined by difference. He sees himself as a kind of creolized vessel of voices from Panama, Havana and New York (both uptown and downtown).




“The connection between jazz and Afro-Cuban music is very well documented,” said Blades, whose grandfather was born in Louisiana and moved to Havana to fight in the Cuban War of Independence from Spain. The interchange of musical knowledge between New Orleans and Havana was crucial to the development of jazz and Afro-Cuban music. New Orleans — which is also Marsalis’ hometown — was “a melting pot of Cuban, French, Haitian, African American, even Mexican musical influences,” said Henríquez. Ragtime jazz pianist and arranger Jelly Roll Morton famously asserted in an Alan Lomax field recording that he often played with a “Spanish tinge,” that was actually an incorporation of a Cuban rhythm called the habanera.

Musicians from Latin America have also played a key role in the development of jazz through the decades: The Harlem Hellfighters, a World War I infantry unit that doubled as a jazz-oriented Army band, was made up of about a third of Afro-Puerto Ricans. Mario Bauzá, a transplanted Afro-Cuban, worked with Chick Webb, Cab Calloway and Dizzy Gillespie. And avant-garde saxophonist Eric Dolphy was a Panamanian immigrant. “Luis Russell, a Panamanian pianist, was with Louis Armstrong for years,” Blades also pointed out.

Increasingly it’s become clear that a dominant strand of mixtura is Blackness. Afro-Puerto Rican figures have been central in Blades’ career, and to salsa. Blades has spoken of singer Cheo Feliciano as his primary influence. He’s praised Tito Curet Alonso as the genre’s master songwriter. And on “Salswing!,” he’s included a high-energy remake of Pete “El Conde” Rodríguez’s “Tambó,” a paean to African drumming.

“The understanding of the African drum is what enables you to play both styles,” said Henríquez.

On “Salswing!,” Blades creatively navigates the intersection between the waning days of extravagant, high-modern big band jazz and recession-era, stripped-down salsa. He sticks to his trademark staccato sonero style on the salsa remakes “Contrabando” and “Tambó,” but on the bolero “Ya No me Duele,” some of the higher-register, Ella Fitzgerald-ish scatting he uses on “The Way You Look Tonight” and “Pennies From Heaven” seeps in.

The album also includes elegantly arranged swing standards like “Paula C.,” a post-breakup chronicle about one of Blades’ first mature romances. He wrote it soon after he arrived in New York in the mid-'70s, when he was working in the mailroom for Fania Records — known as the Motown of salsa — and subletting an apartment from Leon Gast, who directed the classic salsa documentary “Our Latin Thing.”

“It was a very inspiring time, in terms of creativity,” Blades recalled, citing the city’s thriving jazz and salsa scenes. “Everybody was at their best at that time, downtown punk rock was exploding, and you could still go to Tad’s Steaks and get for $1.99 a steak with a potato and corn on the cob.”

While the material on “Salswing!” is very much a retrospective, Blades is still quite engaged with the present and busily pursuing projects with singers he admires. He just finished a track with the revered Cuban vocalist Omara Portuondo, effervescent Mexican singer Natalia Lafourcade and Argentine folk-rocker León Gieco. And following a prepandemic concert in Puerto Rico, he even had a chance to elevator-pitch one of the biggest stars of global pop: Bad Bunny.

“We played 3 1/2 hours and he showed up with his mother and his father,” Blades said. “He was so super respectful, not only to me, but his parents. And then I asked him, in front of his dad, ‘Listen, I have a mortgage to pay, why don’t we do something?’ And everybody laughed.”

“He thought I was kidding,” he added, “but I wasn’t.”

© 2021 The New York Times Company










Today's News

April 28, 2021

Austen museum wants to discuss slavery. Will her fans listen?

Pace Gallery announces exclusive worldwide representation of Jeff Koons

UK teen who threw boy from Tate balcony had not been deemed a risk: report

Phillips launches art advisory service, expanding and deepening support to collectors

Kerry James Marshall's poignant painting Nat-Shango (Thunder), 1991 to be offered at Christie's

Napoleon's bicentennial under shadow of Covid and controversy

Pace Gallery opens an exhibition spanning three decades of Robert Mangold's career

Rubén Blades, a salsa legend, swings in a different direction: Jazz

Modern Art opens an exhibition of new works by Sanya Kantarovsky and Camille Blatrix

Baby mammoths were meals for these saber-tooth cats

Times Square Arts reveals new public art campaign "We Are More" by Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya

Phillips announces expansion to international jewellery team

Female artists triumph at Bonhams Contemporary Art sale in London

Inside Anthony Hopkins' unexpected win at the Oscars

Lauren Applebaum appointed as curator of American art at North Carolina Museum of Art

Pomodoro sculpture brings $186,000 in Ahlers & Ogletree auction

di Rosa Museum announces Ceramic Interventions: Provocative exhibition now on view

Alexander Hamilton scarf headlines single-seller Americana & Political Sale at Heritage Auctions

New book investigates the relationship between Benjamin West and John Singleton Copley

Theodore Lambrinos, baritone with a zest for the road, dies at 85

Central States auctions surpass $47 million at Heritage

Teresa Kutala Firmino's London debut exhibition exhibition opens at Everard Read

Selected works by 58 Israeli artists will be purchased by a $250,000 acquisition fund

Artcurial appoints Gerard Vidal as new representative in Spain

How to Successfully Become a Travel Influencer on Instagram

How to Establish a Successful Lifestyle Channel in 2021

GUIDE ABOUT LOCKSMITH QUEENS

5 Perks Of Choosing Professional Movers




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful