
UPC | REF# | Price |
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68944853021 | JTR 8530 | 15 |
Tango Bitter Sweet
Quadro Nuevo
Label : JTR // // 2007-01-30
There was a time when doing something experimental in tango could not
only result in bad reviews from music critics who didn't understand what
you were doing -- it could also result in bodily harm. The late Astor
Piazzolla, often hailed as the Charlie
Parker of tango, was literally beaten up in the streets of Buenos
Aires by opponents who disliked his vision of tango (which was a major
departure from the old-school tango of Carlos
Gardel, Carlos
Di Sarli, Aníbal
Troilo and Hugo
del Carril). But these days, Piazzolla-minded
tango is very much the norm -- and tango enthusiasts are unlikely to
resort to fisticuffs even if an artist does something expansive that
they don't comprehend. The word "expansive" easily applies to Quadro
Nuevo, a European tango-oriented quartet that takes a lot of chances on
their 2006 recording Tango Bitter Sweet. This 69-minute CD has a
strong Piazzolla
influence, which is hardly unusual in the 21st century; the tiny,
insignificant minority of people who still consider Piazzolla
a musical heretic are like the tiny, insignificant minority of people
who still believe that Dixieland is the only legitimate form of jazz.
What makes Tango Bitter Sweet unusual is the way Quadro Nuevo
combines that Piazzolla
influence with so many non-tango influences; during the course of the
album, elements of Piazzolla
are blended with everything from Brazilian samba to French chanson to
Italian and Mediterranean folk to jazz. One of the selections, in fact,
is an intriguing arrangement of Sidney
Bechet's "Petite Fleur" -- and there are plenty of other songs on
this disc that originated outside of tango but receive a tango makeover,
including Michel
Legrand's "The Windmills of Your Mind" and Rezso
Seress' "Gloomy Sunday" (a Hungarian gem that found its way to jazz
after receiving English lyrics and being recorded by Artie
Shaw and Billie
Holiday in the early '40s). But Tango Bitter Sweet, for all
its risk-taking, is ultimately a very charming and accessible album. The
solos are quite lyrical, and Tango Bitter Sweet is happily
recommended to anyone who is seeking something fresh from tango.
-Alex Henderson, All Music Guide
Now Available on iTunes:
http://itunes.apple.com/ca/album/tango-bitter-sweet/id294552957
Tracks:
02 | Swing vagabond | 4:31 |
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03 | Petite fleur | 4:07 |
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04 | Tango bitter sweet | 3:49 |
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05 | Paroles, paroles | 4:42 |
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06 | The windmills of your mind | 1:53 |
07 | Tango jalousie | 5:07 |
08 | Avant de mourir | 4:13 |
09 | Malafemmena | 4:18 |
10 | Milonga tati | 4:40 |
11 | Et maintenant | 5:11 |
12 | An einem winterabend | 3:27 |
13 | MÃ_de sonne | 4:36 |
14 | Isla de las mujeres | 2:01 |
15 | Gloomy Sunday | 4:06 |
16 | Afternoon | 1:30 |
17 | At night | 2:53 |
18 | Sabre dance | 3:36 |
CD1
01 | L'ete indien | 4:53 |
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