Product Details
Plays the Contemporary Music of Mexico & Brazil

Plays the Contemporary Music of Mexico & Brazil
Cal Tjader

Price:

This item is not available for purchase from this store.
Click here to go to Amazon to see other purchasing options.


17 new or used available from $7.05

Average customer review:

Track Listing

  1. Vai Querer
  2. Qu� Tristeza
  3. Medita��o [Meditation]
  4. So��
  5. Se � Tarde, Me Perdoa
  6. N�o Diga Nada
  7. Silenciosa
  8. Elizete
  9. Imagen
  10. Tenta�o do Incoveniente
  11. Preciosa
  12. Ch�ro e Batuque

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #348485 in Music
  • Released on: 2000-03-21
  • Number of discs: 1

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
The Swedish-American vibraphonist Cal Tjader created a unique Latin/chamber-jazz sound with congueros Mongo Santamaria and Francisco Aguabella that danced and entranced musicians and listeners for decades. This 1962 recording departs from Tjader's trademark combo format and Afro-Cuban stylings and features him in an expanded, orchestrated setting with woodwind arrangements by Clare Fischer. The contemporary music represented on this disc features sambas from Brazil, including "Vai Querer," Antonio Carlos Jobim's "Meditacao"--which beautifully complements Stan Getz's more celebrated version--and "Choro e Batuque," a New World Afro-Amerindian dance composition penned by guest guitarist Laurindo Almeida. Tjader's Milt Jackson-influenced, soft and syncopated touch is supported by a topflight crew of sidemen, featuring flutist Paul Horn and the Cuban percussion king, Changuito, who expand and elongate the melodically rich music of Mexican composer Mario Ruiz Armengol. With the ethereal, wordless vocals of Ardeen de Camp, Tjader and company radiate cool, azure-impressioned Latin tinges on the boleros "Que Tristeza" and "Silenciosa" and the clave-coded "Sone." Clare Fisher's festive samba "Elizete" rounds out this pleasing potpourri of imaginative inter-American music. --Eugene Holley Jr.


Customer Reviews

Utterly Stunning5
Wow. I've owned this CD for five years and just keep coming back to it over and over. I have a rather large collection of 50s & 60s Jazz and 60s bossa nova, including all of the essential canon of bossa: gilberto, jobim, getz, bonfa, baden powell, sergio mendes, et al. This album is somehow overlooked among bossa lovers. And jazz lovers. Tjader here shows the perfectly "sad beautiful" character that always characterized bossa nova from "Chega Saudade" on. Particularly with "Vai Querer" and "Se E Tarde, Me Perdoa," that lilting, joyful melancholy is at its most poignant. I can't imagine a bossa lover not resonating with Tjader's earnest take on 60s bossa nova in these tracks.