Showing posts with label Latino Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Latino Music. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 14, 2018

Sacramento Songwriters Showcase to Feature Performances

Songwriters perform original music at a free showcase, performances to be presented in South Sacramento
Sacramento, California - The Sacramento Songwriter Showcase will feature upcoming and established songwriters performing original music at a free showcase to the greater South Sacramento community public.
Each showcase presentation will featuring the hosting band and local songwriters & guest artists, each presenting a live 20-30 minute set of original Latin music and bilingual compositions in theater stage setting.
Hosted by Frank Lizarraga, Yesenia Fuentes and Ritmoz Latinoz band members with a grant by Creative Economy Pilot Program Grant Award.
March 29th 2018
6:30pm-8:30pm
Dinorah, RITMOZ Latinoz & Xochitl
Sound by DJ Bobby L
La Familia Maple Neighborhood Center
3301 37th Avenue Sacramento CA 95824
Supported by
La Familia Counseling Center, Caballo Mexican Restaurant
Franklin Boulevard Business Association
and Sacramento Presents
For information contact: Frank or Yesenia
http://www.sacramentosongwritershowcase.com/index.html

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Interview: Latino trumpet master for Santana, Bill Ortiz

"It's been an amazing ride, all the places we play and the musicians I've had a chance to play with."

By Dr. Al Carlos Hernandez, Contributing Editor, LatinoLA: October 4, 2012



Bill Ortiz is the lead trumpet player for Santana - a chair he has held for twelve years and in the one million years yet to come. In addition to his world travels, Las Vegas showcases and arena gigs with Carlos' crew, Ortiz's sweet, assertive trumpet attack has made him one of the most in-demand players on the San Francisco Bay Area music scene.

His performing and recording credits include work with such diverse artists and groups as Patti Austin, Cachao, Don Cherry, The Dramatics, Destiny's Child, En Vogue, Sheila E, James Ingram, Tito Puente, Flora Purim and Airto, Todd Rundgren, Arturo Sandoval, Boz Scaggs, TLC, Tony! Toni! Tone!, Cecil Taylor, Johnny "Guitar" Watson, and Steve Winwood. In addition, Bill has been very active as a studio musician in Hip-Hop, R&B and Jazz.

A proud San Francisco native, Bill took up the trumpet at age ten and played in R&B bands as a teenager. He feels that this experience was invaluable to his subsequent jazz work. "I consider myself a jazz player," he said, "but my musical upbringing contains a large amount of Latin playing - I'm part Cuban myself, and I started out playing R&B. What I'm trying to do with my music is reflect all those elements of who I am as a musician. It's basically all African music; it's all branches of the same tree. I'm not a purist at all. I try to bring it all together."

Ortiz is proud to present his new full-length release titled Highest Wish. A follow up to his Winter in America EP released earlier this year, this new album project features conscious emcees such as Casual, The Grouch, Zumbi (of Zion I) and K-Maxx, as well as fellow Santana member (and eleven time Grammy Award Winner) Tony Lindsey, and iconic poet/vocalist Linda Tillery, featured with a spoken word performance of Dr. Martin Luther King's Nobel Peace Prize speech.

Bill said, "Carlos has always used music to inspire and bring people together. I try to follow in that tradition. I've been really inspired by some of the Bay Area hip-hop artists like Casual, Zumbi and the Grouch who make music with enlightened lyrics." When it comes to choosing his guest artists, "We often celebrate ignorance in our society, so I wanted to celebrate consciousness."

On his EP, which charted in the top ten on CMJ's hip hop charts for over a month, Ortiz covers Gil Scott Heron and Brian Jackson's 1973 hit on the track Winter in America as an homage to the recently departed Heron. The concept video for this track has been featured on many mainstream hip-hop websites.

LatinoLA.com Contributing Editor Dr. AC had an opportunity to get to know and now tell an interesting story about another one of his friends from the Santana Family.

Dr. Al Carlos Hernandez (Dr. AC): Why did you decide on becoming a musician? Why the trumpet? What kind of music did you listen to while growing up?

Bill Ortiz (BO): Well, before I started playing the trumpet, music already played a big part of my life during my early years. My parents played music in the house a lot and had a pretty extensive record collection- everything from classical and pop music at the time to soundtracks for movies and plays - stuff that is referred to sometimes and the 'great American Songbook', songs that became jazz standards.

The one record that made the biggest impression was called "Satchmo The Great"- Louis Armstrong performing live with Louis Armstrong performing live with a full orchestra conducted by Leonard Bernstein. We also had a few records of Louis' Hot 5 and Hot 7 bands.

In addition to that, I was ALWAYS listening to the radio. Top 40 at that time was still an important model for radio, much more eclectic and less programmed than it is today. You would hear everything from Motown to Sly and The Family Stone to The Beatles to anything else you could think of. When the high school band came down the hill to my elementary school recruiting for our music program, I was all in. My folks said yes to the trumpet because when they got married, the song "Trumpeter's Serenade" was part of their ceremony. Fortunately they said 'Yes' before they found out they would have to buy me a horn!

Dr. AC: Do you think growing up in SF affected your musical sensibilities? Back in the day the music in the Bay Area was quite eclectic.

Bill Ortiz (BO): Growing up in the Bay Area during the '70's had a huge impact on my musical sensibilities, and that foundation is still strong today. I consider this era of music as a real golden age- it was paramount for many artists at that time to be innovative, progressive and conscious minded, at least the ones I gravitated to. In addition to all the great music coming out of the bay area such as Sly, Santana, and Graham Central Station- there was Curtis Mayfield, Weather Report, The Art Ensemble Of Chicago, the whole punk movement, Donny Hathaway, Stevie Wonder with "Inner visions", The Gil Scott-Heron/Brian Jackson Band, '70's Miles Davis and all the great vocal groups coming out of Philly.

When you can throw in such voices as Richard Pryor, George Carlin, Dick Gregory and Alex Haley with "Roots" -- it was a pretty heady time. Most musicians I hung out with at that time strived to find always something new and innovative to play, and to have their own sound and approach. There weren't that many young musicians in suits running around putting down anything that wasn't 50 years old.

Dr. AC: Was it when you landed first chair in the SF All City Band that you decided to make music a career? Who inspired you to pursuit your dreams?

Bill Ortiz (BO): Although I was first chair at All-City Band and started playing in bars with R&B bands at 16, I didn't really decide to be a full time musician/artist until my senior year. What inspired me to choose that path was a private music teacher I had named Ron Madden, a student at San Francisco State College at the time. Ron was a remarkable teacher who taught me a lot about the whole creative process of improvisation, and how different musicians approached it -- Miles, Wayne Shorter, and John Coltrane. He helped me to understand what was behind licks and scales. I also studied with trumpet guru John Coppola, who also not only helped me to get a clue with improvising but helped me with my embouchure and the mechanics of the horn. I owe them both everything.

Dr. AC: As a teenager you started playing local clubs. What was that first experience like? Did you do R&B and Top 40 cover tunes? What did you family think about you and the club scene? Any ridiculous memories of those days?

Bill Ortiz (BO): My first gig for a local radio station with a band called Charles Stanford and the Saints- I think I made a whole $15 or $20 bucks, and had the time of my life. We played mostly R&B and blues -- stuff like Tower Of Power, Sly, James Brown, Van Morrison, B.B. King, Donny Hathaway, Ohio Players, and Earth Wind and Fire. Off the gig, we'd play all kinds of stuff -- Sun Ra, early Crusaders, Freddie Hubbard, Coltrane. We didn't care; if we liked it we would try to play it.

In regards to ridiculous memories, I'm struggling to think of something I could actually share in public. I have one I was in a club playing a solo-maybe 20 years old. I thought it would be cool to start off with holding a high note for a real long time for dramatic effect. Being a young player pushing his high range, I hyperventilated and passed out for a few seconds. I ended up landing backwards into the drums and onto the floor. I look up and the bass player, still playing the song, is peering over me, saying "Damn!" I get up and finish my solo. The kicker is that on the break, some guy comes running up to me saying, "That was off the hook. How did you do that?" He thought it was part of the show!

Dr. AC: Who are your top five favorite trumpet players of all time? Whose style do you pay homage to? Who is your favorite horn band?

Bill Ortiz (BO): I can't pin it down to 5, but let's start with Louis Armstrong of course, Lee Morgan, Miles, Freddie Hubbard, Blue Mitchell, Kenny Dorham, Dizzy Gillespie, Lester Bowie, Armando "Chocolate" Armenteros, Tom Harrell, Luis "Perico" Ortiz, Don Cherry, Wilber Harden…

Horn bands? All the Motown stuff, New Birth, Sly, Tower, Earth Wind and Fire, Chicago (up to the mid 70's), Ohio Players, Cameo when they had horns, all the Parliament/Funkadelic stuff, early Kool and the Gang.

Dr. AC: Did your ethnicity inspire your pursuit of the genre? Do you view yourself "ethnic" at all?

Bill Ortiz (BO): Being part Cuban, I did have an interest of learning more about Cuban music, although outside of my grandfather, I didn't have that much influence of Cuban culture growing up. That came later as a musician. As I started working professionally, I became involved in the great Latin music scene that still exists today in the Bay Area.

In my early 20's I started working with such artists as John Santos, Pete Escovedo, Francisco Aguabella, and a lot of other great Bay Area bands. I also worked with artists like Tito Puente, "Chocolate" and Israel "Cachao" Lopez when they would venture out to the west coast. As to being "ethnic", I think that would be all of us.

Dr. AC: Tell us about your college years. Where did you go and how was music a part of that? How did you get exposed to Latin music?

Bill Ortiz (BO): Most of my time in college was spent in the library listening to Coltrane and Miles. I was also gigging 5 or 6 nights a week and going to school the next day, and jamming every other minute in the practice rooms with whoever was around - usually a piano and upright bass player, maybe a sax player, too. We would play standards and Coltrane, Coltrane and standards.

Dr. AC: What was your first major gig and how did you land it?

Bill Ortiz (BO): I guess that would be my recording and doing a few gigs with Robert Winters and Fall. Robert was an amazing singer that had a big hit called "Magic Man" on the R&B charts- that was in my early 20's. I would consider my time with Pete Escovedo, John Santos and Peter Aphelbaum and The Hieroglyphics Ensemble as major gigs. With Peter, we played jazz festivals in the US and Europe- both by ourselves and backing up iconic jazz trumpeter Don Cherry. My first touring gig was Tony Toni Tone'.

Dr. AC: Tell us about Tony Toni Tone. What was that whole experience like?

Bill Ortiz (BO): All in all, that was a terrific experience, musically and otherwise. The band was just killin'- the core of the group all came from gospel music backgrounds, and they all just flat out played their asses off. Playing live, we'd add lots of elements that weren't on the original recordings- great arrangements, solos sections and musical interludes. All three of the principals of the group, Raphael Saadiq, Timothy Christian-Reilly and D'Wayne Wiggins are great writers and producers, and all the other musicians were as well. There were long hours on the tour bus with that band, 24-7 of watching Scarface, playing Madden football, brutal cap sessions, listening to gospel quartet music- lots of laughs and good times. We were having more fun then we realized at the time.

Dr. AC: Elaborate, if you will, on working with En Vogue, Janet, Destiny's Child and TLC.

Bill Ortiz (BO): My time with En Vogue, TLC and Destiny's Child mostly involved studio work, although when Santana played at The Super Bowl a few years back, Beyonce performed some songs with us as well. I worked with En Vogue along with a number of artists while working for the producing team Foster and McElroy, who also produced Tony Toni Tone's first 2 CDs.

I used to work the same club circuit when during my late teens and early twenties with Cindy Herron's sister- Cindy was just a kid at the time but already had a reputation as a young talent with big promise. What I mostly remember with working with Cindy and the rest of En Vogue was they all were just basically very nice and down to earth. Recording with TLC took place in Dallas Austin's studio in Atlanta.

I had the pleasure of playing on Janet Jackson's tour with Tony Toni Tone', who was the opening act. Her show had lots of high production- it's really something to see such an elaborate presentation every night, and to see how it all works behind the scenes technically with the video, special effects and sets ... pretty cool! She had a great band and dancers, and she performs her tail off too-it's a total show.

Dr. AC: Did you get type-cast as strictly an R&B player?

Bill Ortiz (BO): I guess it's pretty natural for people to define you by the work you are doing. Hopefully they like or appreciate what you do. I've been the "Latin guy", the R&B guy, the jazz guy, the Latin guy again, the R&B guy again, the guy who's never home…. I am very fortunate to have played lots of different stuff genre wise- it's all good.

Dr. AC: How is it to work with Boz Scaggs? And tell me about your long time association with Lavay Smith.

Bill Ortiz (BO): Working with Boz was great- he always has an outstanding band with top musicians and graciously gives his musicians room to play themselves. He's like Carlos Santana in the regard that they both never got away from being the inspired musician who's driven to play and listen to music. It's important for any musician not to get jaded and lose that total love for music, and the drive to play it.

Lavay Smith and her band are always a blast to play with. Her group is influenced by the tradition of such artists as Duke Ellington, Count Basie and Ray Charles. Lot's of world class players in that group as well- a great mix of older and younger musicians. Besides Lavay being a wonderfully soulful singer, her and Chris Siebert (co-band leader) are about the best people I've ever worked for.

Dr. AC: You have been with Carlos for twelve years. How did you book the gig and how is it living the dream? Is there a downside to fame and fortune?

Bill Ortiz (BO): I became full time band member of Santana in 2000, but had recorded with Carlos on his "Milagro" CD in '92, and gigged with him once or twice previous to my joining the band. He had also seen me play locally with various Bay Area groups. I also knew and played with several members that were in the band. After recording on the song "Smooth", I got the call to join the band.

It's been an amazing ride, all the places we play and the musicians I've had a chance to play with. The group itself is a band of assassins- Dennis Chambers on down. When we hit, it's like wild animals going after raw meat- it's the way of playing with total abandonment to the moment, like it means something to you. It ain't cute and clever. As for Carlos, long before playing with him, I always loved the way he phrased a melody- how he held notes out, milking every drop out of it, especially with the way he uses feedback. I've always been drawn to musicians and singers who had a special gift of lyricism.

In regards to any downside to fame and fortune, I'll have to wait to let you know if it ever applies to me!

Dr. AC: You did your first solo album "From Where I Stand" in 2009 and it was a huge critical success. Tell us about that.

Bill Ortiz (BO): That was my debut release as a solo artist. I feel good about that CD as being my first release, but it was also a huge learning experience. I believe that I've grown as a producer and musician since, and hopefully that growth is reflected on my newest release "Highest Wish". I guess growth means not making the same mistakes, but making new ones.

Dr. AC: Tell us about your latest release 'Winter in America.' Why Gil Scott Heron? Are you trying to make a socio-politcal statement and if so, what is it?

Bill Ortiz (BO): Gil Scott-Heron and Brian Jackson produced some of the most important work of their time, and their music and words are as valid and timely as ever. It seems like we've come full circle and are back ... still dealing with the same issues and problems in society. The words of the song "Winter In America" are as meaningful now as they were when the song was recorded. The lyrics themselves pretty much speaks for itself as to what the message is. Gil was always quite eloquent and clear.

Dr. AC: You've said, "We often celebrate ignorance in our society, so I want to celebrate consciousness." What does that mean to you?

Bill Ortiz (BO): That's a question that could take up a whole interview. In short, all you have to do is look at the tone of reality TV, how our political and religious leaders talk to each other, how we resolve our conflicts with others, the general dumbing down of our society. Music doesn't always need to be about changing the world or bringing a profound message- sometimes it's about getting people from Monday to Tuesday, but it's important to have both.

Art has always had a place in changing social consciousness, and music definitely is one of the things that bridges the gap between people and cultures. I'd say that's a good thing, since we live in a time which we as humans are quite divided and often fail to recognize the humanity of others.

Dr. AC: You seem to have a serious understanding of Hip Hop as an art form and incorporate MC's into your work. Do you think Hip Hop is as legitimate an art form as jazz, R&B, or the rock you play with Santana?

Bill Ortiz (BO): The music of Hip Hop is as valid as any other genre that you mention. On a lyrical level, artists like Chuck D, Mos Def, The Hieroglyphics, KRS-1, Talib Kweli, Zion I and The Grouch are true artists of the word, as are Gil Scott-Heron, Bob Dylan, John Lennon, Curtis Mayfield and Patti Smith. Musically, Hip Hop can be extremely innovative with harmonic tonalities and textures with the uses of samples and live playing. As a next step in the development of R&B, it's a blend of the great tradition of the music's past, and new elements introduced into the mix by the new blood and creativity of younger artists.

Mind you as in all genres, there are examples which don't fit that description. As Miles Davis once said, "music is like food, take what you like and leave the rest."

Dr. AC: Tell us about your work with young people regarding music education.

Bill Ortiz (BO): I'm a product of music in public schools, something that is being whittled away as time goes on-I see it first hand, not only by my involvement with music programs in high schools and middle schools, but also from my wife being a public school music teacher. I jump at the chance to work with young musicians because I know what music education in public schools meant to me.

Dr. AC: How is the Santana ride going for you so far? How long do you plan on staying on the road and how have other band members inspired you?

Bill Ortiz (BO): After 12 years, it's still a dream gig. I've become a much better musician from the experience. I've not only learned a huge amount from Carlos, but also from the experience of playing in front of such large audiences and different situations. Carlos enlists his band members to be present in the moment, to be focused on the note you are playing right now, not what you just played, how the audience might react, or what you are going to have for breakfast tomorrow.

He's looking for you to play with a total abandonment of everything but the creative act you are engaged in at that moment. It's about bringing it 100%, no matter what gig it is, how tired you may be- not phoning it in, EVER. When you see Albert King playing his ass off, making faces and in a crouch while playing, it's because he's in the moment, bringing all he has, not because he's mugging or cultivating an image or persona.

Dr. AC: Any cats you haven't worked with that someday you would like to?

Bill Ortiz (BO): Well, for starters- Erykah Badu, Mos Def/Yasiin Bey, Bjork, Pharaoh Sanders, Neil Young, Rance Allen….

Dr. AC: What kinds of plans do you have for the future and what would be the ultimate project for you? Would you like to produce? Start your own label? Teach?

Bill Ortiz (BO): I have a few projects on the drawing board that I hope to get to soon- hopefully a few surprises coming up. I also would like to do a project involving gospel music. In addition to the many jazz and R&B artists that straddle the lines between these genres and gospel music such as Hank Crawford and David "Fathead" Newman, I've also been musically inspired by people like "The Rance Allen Group", Daryl Coley, The Mighty Clouds of Joy with Joe Ligon, Vanessa Bell-Armstrong, Lashaun Pace, and Paul Porter. I would like also to get more involved producing other artists- I love the craft/process of making a record. It's an art in itself.

In regards to starting a label, my wife Anna Karney and I run our own label together. She is a gifted artist/singer-songwriter who performs as "Karney"-you can check her work out at karney.org and facebook.com/thekarneyband. She has some great releases available on iTunes, including here latest CD entitled "Love & Respect"-check her out! I also hope to continue to teach and pass along whatever I know. I learned by making every mistake you can, so perhaps I can spare someone else that journey.

Please check out Bill Ortiz at http://billortiz.com/music

Edited by Susan Aceves

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Latino music sound turns 40

40 Years Since the Birth of Salsa: Does Anyone Really Care?

By Izzy Sanabria, Salsa Magazine

Izzy Sanabria
For the majority of Latinos struggling to provide a better life for their families, Salsa music is of little concern and certainly not at the top of their list of priorities. So what's so important and why should they care that August 26, 2011 marked the 40th anniversary of the event many consider to be the birth of Salsa?

Why? If for no other reason, it should provide us all with a sense of Pride. Why? Because Salsa is our greatest cultural art form being embraced today by people of all ages and nationalities around the world. I dare say that Salsa is perhaps our greatest contribution to world culture.

Salsa and the 1970s Latino: Cultural Renaissance in New York City
Starting in the late '60s and into the '70s, Latinos had a major cultural impact on New York City. It was a new generation of English speaking Puerto Rican baby boomers who created a Renaissance in all the arts and even had their own media voice (Latin NY magazine). They expressed their presence in poetry, their clothes, lifestyles and, of course, their most popular art form --- their music!

The new Latino lifestyle started emerging in the 1960s with Latin Soul music (The Boogaloo) in places like the St. George Hotel in Brooklyn. In the 1970s, it was the world famous Cheetah Discotheque that became the showplace of these young Latinos, and they gathered by the tens of thousands every Sunday in Central Park. Their immense presence literally Latinized the park as well as the City itself with a new look and a new sound.

August 26 1971: The Fania All Stars perform at the Cheetah

This was no ordinary performance, it was an explosion of energy no one had ever felt or experienced before. This incredible event was captured on film and released the following year as Our Latin Thing. A few years later, it would have a greater impact than when originally released. Ironically, while many consider this night as the birth of Salsa, there is no mention of the word Salsa in the movie.

In 1973, Latin NY Magazine was launched from the Cheetah. The Fania All Stars' concert at Yankee Stadium draws 44,000 screaming fans. Later that year, I hosted a TV Show called Salsa!

1975: The Spark that Ignited the Salsa Explosion!

Its fire fanned by the Newyorican fervor, the Salsa scene was bursting at the seams. Like dynamite waiting for a spark to ignite it, Salsa was ready to explode. The spark came in the form of Latin NY's First Salsa Awards in May 1975.

This event received greater (pre and post) mass media coverage than was ever given to any Latin music event at that time and thus gave Salsa its biggest push and momentum. The coverage by mainstream media such as The New York. Times, created an incredible worldwide avalanche of interest in Salsa. What made the awards (by American media standards) a "newsworthy" event was that we publicized the event and our intense public criticism of NARAS for ignoring 17 years of repeated requests to give Latin music its own separate category in the Grammys.

Though ignored by local Spanish media, the rest of the world took notice. From Europe (Holland, Germany, France, Italy, England, etc.) and as far away as Japan, journalists and TV camera crews came to New York to comment on and document Salsa; what they perceived as a new phenomenon of high energy rhythmic Latino urban music, its dancing and its lifestyles.

Salsa dancing has created a world-wide industry that is booming. Salsa Clubs and dance studios continue to spring up to meet the demands of the 100s of thousands wanting to learn how to dance Salsa. This growing interest has also led to the growth of local Salsa bands throughout European, African and even Asian countries. They sound like and even dress-up to look like 1970s Latinos.

The question is: How did this 1970s urban NY Latino music acquire such a growing audience? "The Latin NY Salsa Explosion" is a film in progress that addresses that question and provides some answers. If you'd like to see it, contact me at SalsaIzzy@gmail.com and I will send you a copy.

Izzy Sanabria is a creative innovative multi-media artist and publisher of Latin NY Magazine that spearheaded and documented the Latino Cultural Renaissance during the 1970s in New York City. He currently resides in Valrico, Florida and can be contacted at SalsaIzzy@gmail.com. For more detailed information visit: www.SalsaMagazine.com. And join him on FaceBook.


Friday, July 1, 2011

Coalition of musicians announce boycott of CBS, Grammys

Organizer claimes the reductions unfairly target ethnic music and call the Academy's decision racist.
By Nekesa Mumbi Moody, Huffington Post 


NEW YORK -- A coalition of musicians that has protested the Recording Academy's decision to drop 31 categories from the Grammy Awards is stepping up the pressure, calling for a boycott of the Grammys' telecast partner, CBS, and hiring a lawyer to explore legal action.


"We will ask people to stop watching CBS, boycott their sponsors and then write them," said Bobby Sanabria, a Grammy-nominated Latin jazz musician and the leader of the coalition, in an interview Wednesday night. "We're at a critical juncture."


The changes have drawn complaints from the likes of Herbie Hancock, Paul Simon and Bill Cosby. They also have gotten attention from organizations like the National Institute of Latino Policy, which issued a statement Thursday in support of Sanabria's coalition.

Sanabria has claimed the reductions unfairly target ethnic music and called the Academy's decision racist.


In response, the Recording Academy said Thursday evening that while it respected the coalition's right to disagree, it rejected its allegations.


"The Recording Academy's board of trustees and its committees - made up of elected, qualified voting members from The Academy's 12 chapter cities around the country and a broad spectrum of music makers - spent two years researching and ultimately making the decision to restructure the Grammy Awards categories for reasons that had everything to do with recognizing excellence in music and the integrity of our awards and nothing to do with ethnicity or race," said a statement from the organization.


CBS is scheduled to broadcast the Grammys next February from Los Angeles. The network declined to comment, a representative said Thursday.


In a move that came as a surprise to some, the Academy announced in April that it was reducing the number of award categories from 109 to 78. While the changes involve mainstream categories such as eliminating the male and female divisions in the pop vocal category to one general field, the Academy also reduced specific categories, including some of the instrumental categories in pop, rock and country; traditional gospel; children's spoken-word album; Zydeco or Cajun music album; best Latin jazz album; and best classical crossover album. Artists in those categories will now have to compete in more general fields, making the process more competitive.


Sanabria said the Academy made the changes without the knowledge of its members and has not released minutes from its meetings regarding the changes.



 

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Latina trailblazing Tejano music

Promesa Mortal keeps it in the family
Joey Guerra, 29-95.com, October 5, 2010

Publisher's Note:  This article first appeared on www.29-95.com.

HOUSTON - Tina Vega first picked up a bajo sexto (12-string guitar) at 9 years old. She probably didn’t realize it at the time, but it made her a bit of a trailblazer.

“It just caught my attention,” she says. “I love challenges. Even my dads friends were like, ‘Your hands are too little.’”

Now in her early 20s, Vega fronts Promesa Mortal, a norteño outfit featuring her two brothers and a female cousin on drums. Vega handles lead vocals and strums her bajo sexto.

And she’s still a rarity in a male-dominated field.

“It’s hard to be taken seriously as a female,” Vega says. “I’ve had a few promoters not give us jobs because I was playing the bajo. They wanted me to sing only and hire a male musician.

“I use it as motivation to keep moving forward. At my shows I always say, ‘Tambien las mujeres pueden.’ Women can do anything a man can do, especially in the music industry.”

Vega says she’s had unwavering support from her parents and sees the late Selena, who seamlessly combined Tejano and pop, as an inspiration. Linda Esobar, a well-respected conjunto singer, is also a mentor.

Promesa Mortal’s own sound is a hybrid of norteño and rock, influenced by everyone from Paramore, AC/DC and Spanish rock band Mana to more traditional acts Los Tigres del Norte and accordion legend Tony de la Rosa. The group released its debut CD, featuring tracks in Spanish and in English, earlier this year.

“Most conjunto bands, Tejano bands stay in their zone. They don’t want to venture out,” Vega says. “They’re scared to because they don’t know how the public will react.

“We want to show rock and pop fans that you can play anything with bajo sexto y acordeon.”

The Vega clan might look familiar to local fans of conjunto music. Promesa Mortal was formerly known as Tina y Los Gallitos, who appeared four times at the Festival Chicano and performed throughout Houston. Vega fronted that incarnation from 10-20 years old.

“We were young, and it was something new, an adventure,” she says. “We traveled a lot. We recorded three albums. We won about four awards.

“Playing with family has its pros and cons. I’m the bandleader, and my older brother doesn’t really like that I’m in charge. We butt heads over a few things. But we all kind of have things were in charge of and our specialties. It balances out.”

Sunday, March 28, 2010

El Chicano founding member memorialized

El Chicano band member joins elite group in Rock and Roll Heaven
By Joe Ortiz, Contributing Writer

Bobby Espinosa, the highly acclaimed organist and co-founder of the legendary El Chicano music group, was memorialized on Saturday, March 20, 2010, by family members, fellow musicians and close friends.

Espinosa, who has been a part of every recording the group has ever released, and was still actively performing with it in concerts all over the world, passed away on February 27, 2010. The gifted musician was recently inducted into "Hammond Heroes," an elite society of the best players on the Hammond organ, becoming the only Chicano Artist ever to be recognized for his unique style of Blues, Jazz and Latin music on the Hammond B3 organ.

At a heart warming memorial mass at St Alfonsus Church in East Los Angeles, and a special musical tribute by fellow performers at Stevens Steakhouse in the City of Industry, California, friends, family members and fellow musicians sent Espinosa off to rock and roll heaven, again, becoming the first Chicano to join another elite group of rock and roll musicians.

“I never knew Bobby personally, but I admired his work from a distance for many years, said Alan O’Day, who co-wrote the song “Rock and Roll Heaven” made famous by The Righteous Brothers recording hit in 1974. O’Day, who is best known for his 1977 number I hit, “Undercover Angel,” grew up with and performed with many Mexican Americans throughout southern California.

“It’s sad that a great musician like Bobby Espinosa has left us,” said O’ Day “but we finally have a Chicano among Heaven’s most gloriously renowned musicians.” In O’Day’s Rock And Roll Heaven song, he cited luminary performers such as Jimmy Hendricks, Janis Joplin. Otis Redding, Jim Morrison, Bobby Darrin and other legendary rock and roll heroes.

Over a hundred friends, family members and fellow musicians witnessed a personal musical tribute to Espinosa at Steven’s Steakhouse (a renowned Latino venue) in the City of Industry, performed by fellow El Chicano band members and other Latino musicians who knew and had performed with Espinosa during his 40 year career with El Chicano.

Freddie Sanchez, fellow co-founder and manager of the El Chicano band, coordinated the tribute to Espinosa, recognizing that his fellow musicians, family and friends needed to personally acknowledge Espinosa’s contribution to the music world, and to thank him for their own personal relationship with the gifted musician.

“As Bobby's brother and longest musical partner, I put this personal tribute together for everyone to attend with love in their hearts for this Chicano icon, and for everything that El Chicano’s music has always stood for,” said Sanchez.

“In our commitment to express our positive feelings and our love for our community, it is my intention to continue the legacy of El Chicano, which Bobby was a major part of, that we are still alive, and our new billing and theme will henceforth be" El Chicano Vive".

Sanchez added that he personally was grateful for the outpouring of sentiments from the musical world and (especially) the East Los Angeles community.

“I could rattle off the hundreds of names and well wishes and condolences I received from throughout the musical world, and also the great throng of musical brothers and sisters who gathered together to pay personal tribute to Bobby,” said Sanchez.

“They know who they are, and they would all agree that the important fact is that we finally have a Chicano musician in Rock and Roll Heaven, and many more will join that select group in the future.”

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Latino music legend succumbs

Bobby Espinosa, Founding Member of Legendary Latino Rock Group, EL CHICANO, Succumbs
By Joe Ortiz

Bobby Espinosa, the man behind the Hammond organ and piano for the Legendary Latino Rock & Jazz, Blues group "EL CHICANO", passed away last night (February 27, 2010). One of the original founding members of the group succumbed at 11:30 PM at White Memorial Hospital in East Los Angeles. He was 60 years of age. By his bedside included his children Reyna, Bobby Jr.; manager of the group, Freddie Sanchez; band mate Jerry Salas, as well as dear friends Tim, Norca and Michelle.

Espinosa has been a part of every recording the group has ever released, and was still actively performing with the group in concerts all over the world. Over the years he has played alongside many of the Top Artist's of today. His compositions have been recorded by El Chicano and other artists, and he has been a producer on many of the group’s recordings and several outside music projects.

He was recently inducted into "Hammond Heroes" an elite society of the best players on the Hammond organ! That honor bestowed on the gifted musician makes him the only "Chicano Artist" ever to be recognized for his unique style of Blues, Jazz and Latin music on the Hammond B3 organ.

A memorial to Espinosa is being planned for the near future. For more information, contact Freddie Sanchez at (602) 531-2962 or email him at fs@elchicanomusic.com

Latino music legend interview

THE ULTIMATE WILLIE COLON INTERVIEW
By Al Carlos Hernandez, Herald de Paris, February 14, 2010

HOLLYWOOD (Herald de Paris) - Willie Colón is an international Latin Music superstar and one of the founding fathers of the genre of music called “Salsa.” This New York City Bronx-born of Puerto Rican grandparents has fused his musical talent, his passion for humanity, and his community and political activism into an extraordinary and multifaceted career. He is, for many, a spokesman for a generation. More.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Latino writer/director pushes urban culture

Empire Builder: Hip-hop icon & urban filmmaker Franc. Reyes
By Al Carlos Hernandez, Herald de Paris, February 7, 2010

HOLLYWOOD (Herald de Paris) – Franc Reyes is the writer/director of several motion pictures including The Ministers, Illegal Tender, and Empire. A Puerto Rican born in Spanish Harlem and raised in the South Bronx, Reyes started his career traveling the world as a dancer/choreographer. By the early 1990’s, after becoming an accomplished songwriter, Franc had written three Billboard Magazine top-forty songs for artists on the Columbia and Atlantic/Atco Record Labels. Soon after signing a music publishing deal with E.M.I. Publishing in 1996, and after reading and soaking in the books and works of the greats (i.e.: Martin Scorsese, Sidney Lumet, Francis Ford Coppola), Franc raised the money and wrote, then directed his first short film In The Deep South, a concept currently being developed for television. In 1998 Franc wrote the script for what would become his first feature film. Empire Music was a big part of Franc’s life so he co-wrote four songs for the films Motown Records soundtrack. This included the title track “Welcome To My Empire” sung by Latin superstar La India. After convincing legendary music producer Emilio Estefan Jr. to produce two of his songs and singer Jon Secada to sing one of them, he was able to get Ruben Blades, actor and music legend, to score his film. Shot independently in New York in 2000, Empire went on to become the highest grossing film at the Sundance Film Festival in 2002 leading to Franc signing a deal with Universal Pictures in 2003. More.

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Piano competition in honor of Latino musician

20th ANNUAL COMPETITION FOR THE CHARLIE PALMIERI MEMORIAL PIANO SCHOLARSHIP
Established by TITO PUENTE
The Latino Journal E-News, Vol. 3, Issue 3

HARBOR CONSERVATORY FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS, a division of Boys & Girls Harbor, Inc. announces the Twentieth Annual competition for the CHARLIE PALMIERI MEMORIAL PIANO SCHOLARSHIP established by Tito Puente. The competition is scheduled for Saturday, February 27, 2010 from 12:00 pm until 2:00 pm at the Harbor Conservatory located at One East 104th Street in Manhattan. For applications and guidelines and to schedule an audition, call (212) 427-2244 Ext. 557.

Serving as competition jurors are pianists, Sonny Bravo, Pablo Mayor, Gustavo Casenave and Dr. Martin Soderberg, Director of the Conservatory's Classical Music Program.

The Charlie Palmieri Memorial Piano Scholarship is awarded to intermediate and advanced pianists ages 12-25 for the study of Latin style piano. Applicants must demonstrate their talents in Classical and/or Popular Latin styles. The winner will receive one year's training free of charge at Harbor Conservatory with one of our specialists in the field of Latin piano. The Scholarship in memory of Charlie Palmieri was established by Tito Puente to further the inspirational musicianship of the great pianist. In style, versatility and instrumental virtuosity, bandleader/pianist/arranger Charlie Palmieri had few equals. In addition to recording, arranging and performing he taught music and Puerto Rican history in the CUNY system. The late great Tito Puente, the "King of Latin music", master timbalero, arranger, composer, and bandleader, also cared deeply about education for young students and the need for youngsters to continue and/or begin their musical studies, as well as to reaffirm pride in Hispanic culture.

Harbor Conservatory for the Performing Arts is proud of its 40 year history of helping young people gain a deeper appreciation of the arts through individual and group instruction, special ensembles, public performances, master classes, and faculty and guest artist recitals. The Harbor's world-renowned Latin Music program is complemented by equally strong Classical Music, Dance and Drama programs. With a curriculum that ranges from Contemporary Salsa and Latin Jazz to traditional Afro-Caribbean folkloric music, and a faculty of "who's who in Latin music" students study a variety of musical forms such as danzon, son, cha cha cha and mambo, as they learn music illustrating different periods and artists in Latin music history.

At the Conservatory students enjoy the unique opportunity to learn while playing classic music made popular by artists such as Tito Puente, Celia Cruz, Johnny Pacheco and others. Profiled in People Magazine, New York Times, Daily News and on Channel 13 in the documentary, “Mi Mambo!”; the Conservatory’s Latin Music program has been a recipient of the Tito Puente Scholarship Fund, Celia Cruz Foundation, Johnny Pacheco Scholarship Fund, Carlos Santana’s Milagro Foundation, and Phish Fan’s Mockingbird Foundation.

For more information regarding Harbor Conservatory and its music, dance and theater programs, please call (212) 427-2244 ext. 573 or visit us on line at www.harborconservatory.org.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Latino crooner sets attendance record

Marc Anthony sets new milestone at Miami's American Airlines Arena
CMN.com

CMN announced that its concert Saturday night, featuring salsa sensation Marc Anthony at Miami’s American Airlines Arena, drew a standing-room only crowd of 15,000 and garnered gross box office receipts of $1.2 million, becoming the single highest grossing Hispanic act ever at the renowned venue.

As a way to recognize this impressive achievement, American Airlines Arena will be presenting Anthony with a special award after the artist helped bring more than 125,000 fans at the arena through 10 shows during the last three years. The combined shows generated a total gross of $9.3 million.

A fixture in the fast-growing Latin pop culture, Anthony’s seemingly tireless energy was confirmed yet again Saturday night, as the 41-year-old crooner offered another electrifying performance during the two-hour star-studded show. The New York native belted out some of his greatest hits including “Hasta Ayer,” “Hasta Que Te Conoci,” and “Te Conozco Bien” in his usual seductive, powerful voice.

One of the highlights of the evening included a surprise visit on-stage by Miami Heat and NBA stars Dwyane Wade and Carlos Arroyo, who presented Anthony with a personalized “# 1” Heat jersey. “You know Marc, this is usually my house, but tonight, mi casa es tu casa,” said the 2006 NBA Champion before a thunder of applauses.

In a more romantic encounter, Anthony was joined by wife Jennifer Lopez as the couple performed the popular ballad, “No Me Ames.”

Saturday night’s concert also marked CMN’s second straight sold-out show following Mexican ranchera artist Vicente Fernandez’s Oct. 18 show at the Allstate Arena in Chicago, where Marc Anthony is scheduled to perform early next year. Details of that show will be announced soon.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Calle 13 and Ruben Blades Set to Perform Together for the First Time on Television at the 10th Annual Latin Grammy(R) Awards

Calle 13 and Ruben Blades Set to Perform Together for the First Time on Television at the 10th Annual Latin Grammy(R) Awards
The Latino Journal E-News, Vol. 2, Issue 2

Calle 13 and Ruben Blades, David Bisbal, Alejandro Sanz, Shaila Durcal and Luz Rios are the first performers announced for the 10th Annual Latin Grammy(R) Awards telecast, it was announced last week by The Latin Recording Academy(R). The milestone celebration is set for November 5 at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas, NV and will be broadcast live on the Univision Network from 8 - 11 p.m. ET/PT (7 p.m. Central).

Five-time Latin Grammy-winning duo and this year's leading nominee, Calle 13's five nods include: Album Of The Year and Best Urban Music Album for Los De Atras Vienen Conmigo, Record Of The Year and Best Alternative Song for "No Hay Nadie Como Tu" (with Cafe Tacvba), and Best Short Form Music Video for "La Perla" (with Ruben Blades). Singer/songwriter Luz Rios has two nods for Best New Artist and Best Female Pop Vocal Album (Aire). David Bisbal, Ruben Blades, and Shaila Durcal each have one nomination: Bisbal for Record Of The Year ("Aqui Estoy Yo" with Luis Fonsi, Aleks Syntek, and Noel Schajris); Blades for Best Short Form Music Video ("La Perla" with Calle 13); and Durcal for Best Ranchero Album (Corazón Ranchero).

As part of the milestone 10th Latin Grammys, 14-time Latin Grammy winner Alejandro Sanz will perform. The Latin Recording Academy and Univision are offering music fans the opportunity to get involved in this year's celebration and decide which song he will sing on the telecast. To participate, fans should visit the "Tu decides qué canta Alejandro Sanz" promotion at www.univision.com and vote for one of his Latin Grammy-winning songs: "El Alma Al Aire", "Y Solo Se Me Ocurre Amarte", "No Es Lo Mismo" and "Tu No Tienes Alma".

Once again, Univision.com is the official Spanish-language Web site for the 10th Annual Latin Grammy Awards. Find exclusive coverage of this year's performers at www.latingrammy.univision.com, including video interviews and photos, an extensive archive of past shows, and dedicated forums for fans to share their excitement leading up to the live broadcast. For access to the latest Latin GRAMMY scoop and photos on-the-go, visit Univision.com on any web-enabled mobile device.

Preceding the Awards show telecast, Univision will present exclusive "Noche de Estrellas" (Night of the Stars) coverage of the celebrity arrivals direct from the Latin Grammy Awards Green Carpet starting at 7 p.m. ET/PT (6 p.m. Central). Presented by "Primer Impacto" co-anchor Barbara Bermudo and host of "Nuestra Belleza Latina" Giselle Blondet, "Noche de Estrellas" will feature live interviews and commentary on the stars and their fashions, and provide viewers an intimate and up close look at Latin music's most glamorous gala event.

A limited number of tickets to the 10th Annual Latin Grammy Awards are available to the public and may be purchased at the Mandalay Bay Events Center box office phone number (877) 632.7400, website www.mandalaybay.com) or through Ticketmaster, website www.ticketmaster.com.

The Latin Recording Academy is an international, membership-based organization comprised of Spanish and Portuguese-speaking recording artists, musicians, songwriters, producers and other creative and technical recording professionals. The organization is dedicated to improving the quality of life and cultural condition for Latin music and its makers. In addition to producing the Latin Grammy Awards to honor excellence in the recorded arts and sciences, the Latin Recording Academy provides educational and outreach programs for the Latin music community.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Latin Music USA launched on PBS

Documentary follows the evolution of Latin music
''Latin Music USA'' will air in two parts, the first two segments at 9 p.m. Monday, and the second two at 9 p.m. Oct. 19 on WPBT-PBS 2.
BY JORDAN LEVIN, Miami Herald

When the Fania All-Stars played a legendary concert at Yankee Stadium in 1973, the stands were filled with 63,000 people who were so crazy for the radical new music called salsa that they stormed the stage. It was a bigger audience than the 55,000 who turned out for the Beatles' famed show at Shea Stadium eight years before. And yet there was almost no mention of the event in mainstream media, as if, for most of the country, one of the biggest concert events to take place in America hadn't happened.

A four-part PBS documentary aims to tell the story of that concert and the largely unknown history of Latin music in the United States, a rich tale of a vibrant music mostly ignored and misunderstood by its home country. Latin Music USA, which begins at 9 p.m. Monday on WPBT-PBS 2 and PBS nationally, fills in the role Latin music plays in American music, from the Cuban and Mexican influence on early rock and roll to the way reggaeton allowed young U.S. Latinos to find their own place in hip-hop culture.

Produced by Boston PBS station WGBH, the series tells the quintessentially American story of immigrants combining their musical heritage with the music of their new home, to create something that could only have happened in the United States.

``What we set out to do is place this story in the great stream of the American story,'' says Elizabeth Deane, Latin Music USA's executive producer. ``This is American music, these are American artists.''

Deane and fellow WGBH producer Adriana Bosch came up with the idea for the series in 1997, as a Latino version of Deane's award-winning history of rock and roll. Concentrating on the role Latinos played in American music was a way to focus an enormous subject, and make it compelling to both Latinos and a broader audience.

``We started out saying, what is Latin music? Bossa nova? Andean flute? Corridos?'' says Bosch, the series' Cuban-born senior producer and director of its fourth segment, Divas and Superstars. ``For Latinos, it's a question of history and memory and validation. We have had a very large impact on American music, and we are part of the history of this country.''

FOUR SEGMENTS

The first segment, Bridges, reaches back to the 1940s to show the creation of Latin jazz, or Afro-Cuban jazz, as Mario Bauza, the Cuban bandleader who first linked Cuban rhythms and American jazz, called it, and the mambo explosion. The Salsa Revolution tells the story of Fania and the creation of salsa in New York in the '70s, while the third section, Chicano Wave, shows Mexican-American figures like Richie Valens, Selena, Linda Ronstadt and Los Tigres del Norte, ``the most famous band that North Americans never heard of.''

The last hour, Divas and Superstars, looks at Gloria Estefan, the ``Latin Explosion'' ignited by Ricky Martin in 1999, crossover, reggaeton and the vital role that Latin pop plays in staking out a place for Latinos in American pop culture and identity.

Narrated by Jimmy Smits, the project does a fine job of weaving together explanations of the music itself, the way it rose from and affected the mainstream, and of capturing Latin music's energy and appeal. Bridges not only depicts the considerable musical achievements of artists such as Bauza, Machito, Chano Pozo, Dizzy Gillespie and Tito Puente, but the excitement and social ferment of the era, where Latinos, blacks, whites and Jews mixed it up on the dance floor of the famed Palladium nightclub, whose most famous dancers, a black Puerto Rican, Pedro ``Cuban Pete'' Aguilar, and a white Italian American, Millie Donay, electrified a crowd, and eventually a nation, even in segregated 1950s America.
Bridges also illuminates hidden links between mambo and mainstream American music. Mambo and cha-cha-cha rhythms found their way into rock classics like the Rascals' Good Lovin and the Rolling Stones' Satisfaction. It turns out that pioneering rock promoter Bill Graham was a Palladium ``mambonik'' whose love of Cuban rhythms led him to promote seminal San Francisco rocker Carlos Santana. We see Tito Rodriguez, one of the big three mambo era bandleaders, spinning on the dance floor in a way that looks almost identical to the Puerto Rican homeboys who would help invent breakdancing decades later.

``It's remarkable how resistant the American mainstream is to the Latino voice,'' says Bosch. ``Yet the music reverberates through so many genres.''

SANTANA ON LSD

Along the way there are terrific stories and personalities. Santana, high on LSD for his career-making Woodstock performance, wrestling the guitar he thought was a snake and praying ``just keep me in tune and in time and I'll never do this again.'' The famous ``Wanted by the FBI'' album cover and poster for gangsta-styled salsa pioneer Willie Colon that had people calling the feds for a reward. Mexican-American country music star Freddie Fender (real name Baldemar Huerta), who wrote the hit Wasted Days and Wasted Nights on toilet paper, and was living in a converted chicken coop when he was discovered by an American producer.

Divas deals with the often maligned but crucial effect of crossover and the Latin explosion that saw Martin, Marc Anthony, Shakira and Jennifer Lopez become mainstream stars. Bosch credits Gloria and Emilio Estefan for pioneering that crossover, and the shrewdness of pop architects like producer Desmond Child, who talks about designing the video for Livin' La Vida Loca so that Martin seems like a modern-day Elvis Presley, a reincarnation of a familiar pop icon.

Bosch found justification for Latin pop's importance, even if the music was watered down for the mainstream, in an interview with Lin-Manuel Miranda, creator of the Tony Award-winning Broadway musical In The Heights, which he was inspired to write by the success of the ``Latin explosion.'' Miranda said that ``young Latinos were so hungry to see themselves represented in the mainstream that it didn't matter how `authentic' the sound was,'' Bosch says. ``Just the presence of the Latino voice in the mainstream, and the acknowledgement that we were here and a presence in society was enough.''

Monday, October 5, 2009

Dudamel gets Latino style welcome

Gustavo Dudamel gets a special Latino welcome
Perhaps no one was more excited about the L.A. Philharmonic's new music director than the 60 members of the Latino Welcome Committee, which formed shortly after the Venezuelan's appointment.
By Reed Johnson, LA Times, October 2, 2009

José Luis Sedano says that his love of classical music began as a child, when his father, a bracero worker in the United States, would bring records home to Mexico City.

"The first music I knew was Chopin’s ‘Polonaise,' " says the 67-year-old photographer and filmmaker. Later, after he moved with his family to Los Angeles, Sedano worked as an usher at the Hollywood Bowl, where he saw the Beatles perform, then at L.A.'s newly built classical music temple, the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion.

This week, Sedano was back at the Bowl with a videocamera making a documentary about the newest and potentially most significant link yet forged between classical music and Southern California Latinos: the appointment of Gustavo Dudamel as music director of the Los Angeles Philharmonic.

Of the many people and institutions hailing the young Venezuelan maestro's arrival this week, none is rolling out a bigger symbolic red carpet than the Latino Welcome Committee, of which Sedano is a member. A volunteer group of about 60 people, including educators, artists, attorneys, civic and business leaders, policy consultants and architects, it formed shortly after Dudamel's five-year appointment was announced in April 2007.

Organizers say that the committee came together more or less organically, out of preexisting connections and outreach programs involving the L.A. Phil and area Latinos. When the orchestra appointed Dudamel, multiple conversations and ideas started flowing between Disney Hall and its Latino patrons and supporters, and the committee jelled from that interchange.

"A lot of us have worked very closely with the L.A. Philharmonic throughout the years," says Angie Castro, a committee member and community press deputy for L.A. County Supervisor Gloria Molina. "If you talk to professionals, that's part of our life. We go to LACMA. We go to the Hollywood Bowl."

Tonight, the committee will officially host Dudamel with a reception at the Bowl that will bring together Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, Molina and about 400 local civic and cultural leaders, including a smattering of Hollywood celebrities such as Jimmy Smits. A cross-section of musical talent will perform, including two youth orchestras, Jose Rizo's Jazz on the Latin Side All Stars, José Hernandez and Mariachi Sol de México and Johnny Polanco y Su Conjunto Amistad.

Additionally, Dudamel's inaugural concert as music director, "¡Bienvenido Gustavo!" at the Bowl on Saturday night, will have a distinctly Latin flavor, with performances by the young Cuban pianist Alfredo Rodriguez and David Hidalgo of Los Lobos with Taj Mahal and the musical troupe Los Cenzontles. Dudamel will conduct the YOLA Expo Centre Youth Orchestra in Beethoven's "Ode to Joy" and close the evening by leading the Los Angeles Philharmonic in Beethoven's Symphony No. 9.

Dudamel won't be the first Latino to fill a top position in Southern California's classical music world. Jorge Mester, the longtime music director of the Pasadena Symphony Orchestra, was born in Mexico City and has served as music director of the Mexico City Philharmonic Orchestra. Plácido Domingo, the Spanish-born superstar tenor who runs Los Angeles Opera, was raised partly in Mexico and has strong ties to Latin America.

But the 28-year-old conductor's youth and charismatic presence present the philharmonic and its Latino community partners with an unusual opportunity. Historically, the area's largest cultural entities have had only sporadic success in attracting substantial Latino audiences, in a region where roughly half the population is now of Hispanic descent. Often in the past, attendance would surge for a Latino-themed play opening or art exhibition, then gradually slip back.

"All of the major cultural organizations in L.A. have struggled with this issue through the years," says John Echeveste, a committee member and a partner at VPE Public Relations. "The difference here, I think, is that Gustavo is here for five years, so we have a real, live person here who can go out and tell the story."

Erick Serrato, an L.A.-based consultant, says that one of the formative influences on the Latino Welcome Committee occurred some time ago at a Walt Disney Concert Hall performance that included mariachi musicians.

"A lot of us showed up to the L.A. Phil and a lot of people said, 'Oh, wow, look at all these brown people here!' " Serrato recalls. "I think for a lot of us that was an epiphany. It was an instant where we felt suddenly the music felt very accessible to us, the venue felt very accessible to us. And how do we keep this together?"

The committee aims to continue collaborating with the L.A. Phil in reaching out to local Latinos during Dudamel's inaugural season and beyond, and in promoting greater access to the arts. Those efforts will include a number of youth-centric initiatives, such as the recently formed YOLA, which was inspired by El Sistema, the Venezuelan national music education program that nurtured Dudamel.

In addition to such projects, and to continue to include Latin composers and artists in its concert programming, the philharmonic has signaled its commitment to building Latino audiences by investing heavily in a bilingual promotional blitz around Dudamel. Working with alPunto, an Orange County-based marketing firm, the Phil developed an advertising campaign pairing images of the conductor with Spanish words such as "pasión" and "vibrante."

The Phil also for the first time printed its program book for Saturday's concert in both English and Spanish., accents included, the first time it ever has done so.

"What we are learning and developing with, as a result of Gustavo, [is] this whole concept of how we truly integrate ourselves into the fabric of the community," says Deborah Borda, the Los Angeles Philharmonic's president.

Committee member , a UCLA theater professor and artistic director of the Latino Theater Company, says the evolving profile of L.A.'s cultural institutions reflects a different city than existed 10 years ago.

"The face of America is changing," he says, "and we're participating in that change."

reed.johnson@latimes.com

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Latino pianist retires from Hotel Bel-Air

At the Hotel Bel-Air, a pianist's elegance and ivory
For a dozen years, Antonio Castillo de la Gala has charmed patrons at the hotel's Champagne Bar. Tonight, the boy from Veracruz ends his run.
By Martha Groves, LA Times, September 29, 2009

The Champagne Bar at the Hotel Bel-Air is dark as a lair. Ice clinks as men and women on caramel-colored leather chairs and forest-green couches imbibe, converse and laugh. A roaring fire blasts light and warmth, which is welcome, despite the heat of a late-summer evening, because the air-conditioned room feels like an ice bucket.

Against a wall, under giant paintings of swans, Antonio Castillo de la Gala -- dapper in a dark suit, striped tie and crisp shirt -- surveys his domain from his perch at a Yamaha baby grand piano. As his hands caress the keys, his bespectacled eyes roam the dark-paneled bar and he nods at the many familiar faces.

Five nights a week for 12 1/2 years, Castillo de la Gala has entertained patrons with classic songs rendered in a style rich in embellishment and filigree.

Think "As Time Goes By," "Someone to Watch Over Me," "The Man I Love." Think Gershwin, Porter, Kern, tangos, Broadway, movies -- all elevated by masterly keyboard technique. This is music to fall in love by, and Castillo de la Gala did. (The hotel provided the swans and a gazebo, but that's getting ahead of the story.)

The lounges of top-tier hotels are a distinct musical niche, a rarefied, murmurous, dimly lit world in which Castillo de la Gala is a highly polished fixture, even a minor legend.

With a 2,000-song repertoire committed to memory, he has amassed a fan base of philanthropists, captains of industry, kings, queens, movie stars and fellow musicians.

Given the venue, it is no surprise that celebrities, musical and otherwise, are frequently in the audience. Castillo de la Gala recites their names with relish; a robust self-regard, tempered by droll self-deprecation, is part of his charm. He has played duets with Phyllis Diller and Billy Joel. Paul McCartney stopped by once and, the pianist reports, was wowed by his arrangement of "Eleanor Rigby."

When Robert Goulet showed up one night, Castillo de la Gala launched into "The Impossible Dream," and Goulet sang along. A few months before his death, the pianist said, Michael Jackson applauded quietly after every song.

"For a boy from Veracruz to come to this country and mingle with such people, it's an amazing life," Castillo de la Gala said.

Tonight, the boy from Veracruz ends his run at the Bel-Air, which is closing for a renovation expected to last two years. Along with about 220 other employees, Castillo de la Gala is losing his job.

No matter. He's expecting a crowd.

"It's going to be insane," he said. "Everybody and their mother will be coming. It's going to be a logistics problem for the hotel. Thank God it's not my problem!"

In 1946, the year Castillo de la Gala was born in Mexico, entrepreneur Joseph Drown opened the Hotel Bel-Air on a wooded site acquired from Alphonzo E. Bell's Bel-Air Estates.

The pink-stuccoed Mission-style landmark became a lush hideaway for the upper crust of Hollywood and politics. It was where Grace Kelly slumbered after winning the best actress Oscar for "The Country Girl" and where Marilyn Monroe posed sultrily by the diving board in a strapless bathing suit. Where Elizabeth Taylor briefly lived with husband No. 1, Nicky Hilton. Where Richard Nixon wrote his memoirs (in Room 138) and where Nancy Reagan still dines regularly on the terrace.

But at 63, the five-star Bel-Air, on 12 acres in a canyon north of Sunset Boulevard, is showing its wrinkles. The 91 rooms "are getting tired and do need refurbishing," said general manager Tim Lee. And there's that matter of technology; 99% of guests, Lee said, cannot use their cellphones at the hotel.

Castillo de la Gala had hoped that he and his fiancee, Kathryn Tran, would marry at the hotel next year, but now they must make other plans. Two years ago, Tran was in the audience and requested several classical pieces: Rachmaninoff, Pachelbel, Puccini's "O Mio Babbino Caro." On the way out, she asked for his business card. Not long after, he proposed to her in the gazebo next to the hotel's famed Swan Lake.

One evening in early September, Castillo de la Gala warms up with the theme from "Love Story" and "The Music of the Night" from "Phantom of the Opera." The pianist, who does his own arrangements, adorns each selection with arpeggios and scales and ends with a flourish, lifting his hands off the keys or running a thumb along the keyboard.

Castillo de la Gala enjoyed a brief career as a concert pianist in Mexico and the United States. His last performance as a soloist with an orchestra was in Tucson in the 1980s, when he performed Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 3.

His website (www.antoniocastillodelagala.com) indulges in florid language about his place "as an heir to the Liszt legacy." That's a bit like a novelist comparing himself to Tolstoy. Castillo de la Gala said that particular passage was written by someone else and that he is "much more modest."

His biographical material boasts of a degree in concert piano in 1976 from the National Conservatory of Music in Mexico City, where he later taught. He says he studied with Angelica Morales von Sauer, wife of piano virtuoso Emil von Sauer, Liszt's last pupil, as well as other masters.

He has performed, as recently as last year, in private homes and at consulates for the Los Angeles Philharmonic's International Committee. After playing at a Christmas concert a few years ago at the Liberace Foundation in Las Vegas, he and a gold-laméd Santa drove across a parking lot in a mirror-tile-adorned Volkswagen with a Rolls-Royce grille to light the holiday tree.

In 2002, he began a one-man show, featuring his talents as a musician, quipster and storyteller, that he takes to private homes and parties. Longtime bar patrons have become his angels, hiring him to perform at their homes and elsewhere.

"He's a one-man piano player who sounds like an orchestra," said Donald Tallarico, a jeweler who lives in Bel-Air and goes to hear the pianist several times a week. "If anyone else were playing, it'd be just a song. With him, it's a symphony."

Tallarico has known the musician since he played at the Beverly Hills Hotel in the 1980s and early '90s before it closed for renovation in 1992. ("Max Factor and I were the last to leave the Polo Lounge," Castillo de la Gala said.) Tallarico followed the music to L'Orangerie and then the Bel-Air.

Castillo de la Gala's grandmother began teaching him to play when he was 3. His father, an itinerant salesman, actor and ballroom dancer, never made much money but had a passion for books. "I had one of those ideal childhoods, with no car, no TV, no phone," Castillo de la Gala said.

But he had music. He performed on radio at age 5 and gave a solo recital the next year. Years later, he said, he took first prize in a Chopin competition in Mexico.

Performing in Puerto Vallarta years ago, he was peppered with song requests by two American tourists. Later, they offered to sponsor him as an immigrant to the U.S. so that he could play for patrons at their Tucson restaurant.

Once in the United States, he picked up idiomatic English by watching Woody Allen movies. He became a citizen about 10 years ago.

His work is his passion. He's not good at remembering names, he said, but knows people by the songs they request. That goes even for the guy who asked him to perform Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto. "I play the piano," Castillo de la Gala deadpanned.

Someone once asked for the Israeli national anthem, "and I knew it," he said. He is not above the occasional put-down. When a customer inquired whether he played mariachi music, he replied: "Look at my outfit. Do you see a mustache, a sombrero and a serape over my shoulder?"

In addition to playing selections by Beethoven, John Lennon and Ennio Morricone, the pianist composes songs with unabashedly romantic titles such as "First Love" and "Illusions of Love."

Music "just flows out of him," said Valerie Sobel, a philanthropist and longtime friend and patron. "He is. . . . all charm and talent and good will."

Sobel has heard Castillo de la Gala "maybe 100 times" at the Champagne Bar. Soon, she will be moving along with the maestro.

Come Oct. 6, the pianist will be appearing at the Peninsula Hotel in Beverly Hills. His reputation precedes him. A spokeswoman for the luxury hotel says it will adjust the seating and menu in its Living Room "to accommodate Antonio and his many fans." He will play in the Club Bar Tuesday and Wednesday nights and in the Living Room Thursdays through Saturdays.

In his wildest dreams, Castillo de la Gala said, he could not have imagined his musical path. "My life is doing music. It's a dream life."

martha.groves@latimes.com

Monday, September 14, 2009

Latino record shop closes its doors in city

Ritmo Latino Closes Its Doors
By ALISSA FIGUEROA, sfgate.com

They squinted into the emptied space at Mission and 20th streets and wondered aloud what had happened to the record store where they had passed many an afternoon.

The neon sign still screams RITMO LATINO, but inside on Saturday only a few boxes remained.

"It's really unfortunate," said Jorge Bermeo in Spanish. He'd headed to the store around midday to use the money transferring service the store provided; though he planned, like usual, to stick around an extra 10 or 15 minutes to listen at one of the store's music stations.

"It was a way to pass the time," said Bermeo wistfully about the store that had become a fixture for many. It closed on Tuesday, after 19 years in business. Read more here.

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Latino rocker helps thaw US-Cuba relations

Latino rocker sees Havana gig helping U.S.-Cuba thaw
By Pascal Fletcher, Reuters, Aug 26, 2009

MIAMI (Reuters) - Colombian rock star Juanes says a public concert he plans in Cuba next month could help further thaw U.S.-Cuban ties despite outcry from some Cuban exiles who accuse him of pandering to the island's communist rulers.

Juanes, who lives in the United States, told the Miami Herald in an interview published on Wednesday he saw his scheduled September 20 concert in Havana's Revolution Square as a chance to promote reconciliation between Cuba and the United States, which have been ideological foes for nearly 50 years.

"I am not a communist ... I'm not going to Cuba to play for the Cuban regime ... Our only message is one of peace, of humanitarianism, of tolerance, a message of interacting with the people," he told the paper at his Key Biscayne home.

Juanes, 37, whose full name is Juan Esteban Aristizabal Vasquez, is a major star in the Spanish-speaking music world and has won a string of Latin Grammy Awards.

A 47-year-old U.S. trade embargo against Cuba restricts travel to the Communist-ruled island by Americans, although special licenses can be granted.

A U.S. State Department spokesman said Juanes met Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in May to propose his concert and they had discussed the general support of President Barack Obama's administration for "people to people" contacts with Cuba.

But he said Clinton refrained from taking a specific position and it would be up to the Treasury Department, which enforces the U.S. embargo, to issue the necessary licenses for those involved in the concert to make the trip.

A Treasury spokesperson said Juanes required a license because he resided in the United States, which made him subject to U.S. jurisdiction even though he was Colombian. The spokesperson did not say whether the license had been granted. Continued...

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Latina takes music to new heights

A Conversation with CMN’s Executive Vice President of Marketing Elena Sotomayor
CMN blogspot

As her patent black pumps click fervently across the slick hardwood floors, Elena Sotomayor appears omnipresent on a quiet weekday morning at CMN’s River West offices in Chicago. She stops at each of the cubicles along the way to confirm conference calls, schedule business trips and exchange ideas with the rest of her team, smitten by the executive’s seemingly endless energy to help set into motion another action-packed day at the company headquarters.

At only 5’3", Sotomayor’s presence is commanding. When she speaks, it’s with conviction. When she walks, it’s with confidence. And when she works, it’s with diligence. The CMN Insider caught up with the 37-year-old, Bogota native to discuss her path to success and a recipe for retaining clients. –By Juel Grange

JG: You were recently named to Crain’s Chicago Business’ “Forty Under Forty” class and have been a constant, driving force at CMN, leading the charge in sponsorship and marketing efforts, such as next year’s highly anticipated Billboard Latin Music Concert Series. To what do you attribute the company’s impressive growth?

ES: I think it is simply the company’s desire to continue developing really unique, innovative programs, especially in the areas in which we specialize, which is music and sports. We love new challenges and welcome the opportunity to make an impact for our clients. Our event marketing department and the company in general is rapidly growing, and that adds more momentum to our image as well as credibility in the market place.

JG: What has been the secret to keeping such a great client base?

ES: We strive to design and execute quality, flawless events for each of our clients. We enjoy going above and beyond what we were hired to do because we love what we do. It’s always a great feeling when a client comes back to ask us for more ideas.

JG: In your interview with Crain’s, you mentioned that you were faced with a language barrier when you first arrived in the U.S. How would you describe that experience and in what ways did it shape your future?

ES: I studied English at a school in Colombia for many years, and I thought I was fluent. But once I came to the U.S. and people started talking to me, as fast as they did, I found myself understanding only bits and pieces. Understanding the language obviously proved to be difficult, and so I would say “yes “to practically everything. So at one point I told one of my classmates that “yes” I would run for student council president, and “yes” I would go on to campaign. The next day at school I saw posters of myself with signs to vote for me for class president. I ended up being named class president, and it was like a life changing experience for me because I had a responsibility to help my classmates and it forced me to learn the language.

JG: You’ve worked as a model, dancer, and even as an actress in theatrical productions. What did you learn from those experiences that you might apply to your work in event marketing?

ES: That was so long ago! I loved it but there came a point in my life when I had to choose from the corporate road or the entertainment road, and I decided to take the corporate route. The other experiences were fun but I was doing it mostly to get me through college. There are definitely some things to take back from those experiences. I really enjoy being in event marketing because there is still so much room to be creative and make a great impact.

JG: Dealing with a lengthy repertoire of clientele and numerous nationwide events throughout the year, do you ever find it a challenge to stay organized?

ES: Absolutely. It seems like there’s always so much going on. Each project is important and then there are the details. I believe there are two main qualities that one must have in order to do this job well. One is common sense, and the other is organization. I have tried the agenda, the digital agenda, the folders, the labeled folders, the Blackberry, the Blueberry and the Boysenberry [Laughing]. I have my calendar on three different formats so I don’t loose it. I have my contacts on three different formats so I don’t loose them. I am synced from my computer, to my brain, to my phone, to my Blackberry. I also have gigantic boards on my office wall. I try to lead project managers to work under a similar environment, so that we are on the same page, otherwise, it can easily become hectic. We learn from each other everyday and we all have our own style in order to get the job done.

JG: What is the current state of event marketing?

ES: Well, we’ve obviously seen major brands cutting all sorts of budgets and needing to do more with less. Part of that strategy for some brands is to come face-to-face with consumers and spend their money more wisely with grassroots efforts such as sampling and experiential efforts, and that’s where we come in. We have been fortunate to be able to help clients become more cost-efficient now while continuing to get the needed results. I’ve had clients who had never tried event marketing before benefit from a simpler plan that literally brings them closer to their consumers. It’s a wonderful option that can still be impactful and one that has actually helped us during the recession.

JG: A lot of the promotional campaigns are so elaborate and visually appealing that one would think they’ve walked right into a dream world. How do you keep ideas fresh and is there something you look to for inspiration when drafting a concept?

ES: That’s the biggest challenge. We have a client vision and with that various expectations. The challenges that are presented to us can have many solutions, but we have to develop a concept that will work best for that particular client. Ideas come to me in various ways and at different times, even in my sleep! Sometimes I’ll listen to music or watch TV for added inspiration but I have a great deal of confidence in my team as well. We work well together and take pride in shaping ideas that work for our clients.

Latino salsero release CD after 6 years

Ruben Blades releases new CD after 6-year absence
The Associated Press, Aug. 18, 2009

PANAMA CITY -- Famed salsa musician Ruben Blades has released a new album after a six-year absence from the music scene.

The 61-year-old Grammy winner from Panama says the CD, "Songs of Underdevelopment," is a tribute to Cuba, his mother's homeland.

Blades says he played most of the instruments heard on the CD recorded in the garage of his Los Angeles home. He says the album is full of simple sounds that reflect Latin America's popular music.

Blades began working on the album in 2003 but put it aside when he was named Panama's tourism minister, a post he held until June 30.

In a statement Monday, he says the CD will be sold through his Web site. He plans a tour that will start Aug. 21 with a concert in Puerto Rico.

Friday, July 17, 2009

Latino musican awards program goes national

Awards program honoring Latino musicians goes national
By Sandra Zaragoza, Austin Business Journal - July 16, 2009

Editors Note: Music Industry Today is a series that will appear on this site every Thursday looking at the issues and artists shaping Austin's music scene.

Demonstrating the growing strength of the Texas Hispanic market, an Austin-based Latino music awards show will receive national air time this year.

For the first time, “Premios Texas 2009” is airing nationally on cable, Spanish-languange network Galavisión on Sunday, Aug. 23 at 7 p.m. CT. Univision — Galavisión’s parent company — will also air the show in some of its markets. Austin-based KAKW Univision 62 produces the awards program.

Luis Patino, vice president general manager of Univision 62, said getting national air time speaks to the wide appeal of the show’s musical line up, as well as Texas’ growing clout in the Latino music industry.

“The state of Texas and the Texas Hispanic market represent a large business opportunity for a lot of these record labels,” Patino said. “There is a lot of influence that Texas has over the music industry.”

In its fifth year, the awards show is now national in scope. This year’s show will feature bands and artists from around the world, as well as local bands, such as Vallejo. The musicians represent various Latin music genres, including pop, tropical, regional Mexican, rock and urban. The award winners are chosen by Texas voters.

A free pre-event concert on Aug. 12 is expected to draw about 5,000 people. The invite-only awards program will take place at the Long Center on Aug. 13, and attract about 2,500 people.

The awards show has been profitable for the station, Patino said, declining to disclose specific figures.

Tecate Light is the event’s title sponsor for the second year in the row. The program has also attracted Target, but Patino said that two major sponsors are still pending.

Given the economy, sponsorship is not what the station would have liked, but Patio believes it will end up about flat compared to last year.

Nevertheless, garnering national air time is proof positive that there is a demand for this type of event, Patino said.

“I think that there was a heavy demand to have this type of premium property,” he said.

Patino hopes that the show will also raise Univision’s profile in the Austin market.

“People don’t realize that [Univision 62] is the No. 1 station in the market,” Patino said. “This is a statement on where Austin is going, where Austin is and the relevance of Spanish-language media.”

Univision 62 nabbed the No. 1 spot for the 5 p.m. newscast among 18-49 year olds for the entire first half of 2009, he said.

As far as “Premios Texas” goes, the station’s long-term goal is to expand its reach.

“It would be nice to continue to showcase Austin. We are the Live Music Capital of the World; We want Austin to be the Live Music Capital of Latin Music,” Patino said.

szaragoza@bizjournals.com