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Paul Carlon: "La Rumba is a Lovesome Thing - Tribute to Billy Strayhorn"

Paul Carlon - CD Release Party "La Rumba is a Lovesome Thing - Tribute to Billy Strayhorn" - Thursday, Jul 11th at The Greenwich House ( 46 Barrow Street in the West Village)

"La Rumba Is A Lovesome Thing – Tribute To Billy Strayhorn"
( Zoho ZM201309)
Street Date: 07/09/2013
Paul Carlon: tenor and soprano saxophones, flute, arrangements, Anton Denner: alto saxophone, flute, piccolo, Alex Norris: trumpet, Mike Fahie: trombone (2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 9, 10), Mark Miller: trombone, Ryan Keberle: trombone (1, 6, 8), John Stenger: piano, Dave Ambrosio: acoustic bass, William "Beaver" Bausch: drumset, Christelle Durandy: vocals (1, 2, 4, 7, 9), Benjamin Lapidus: vocals and decima (1), tres (1, 2, 6, 10), Wilson "Chembo" Corniel: congas (3, 5, 10), Obanilu Ire: barriles and maraca (6), Pedrito Martinez: vocals (1, 2), congas (1, 2, 8) and batá (2)

Saxophonist Paul Carlon's new album, "La Rumba Is a Lovesome Thing—Tribute to Billy Strayhorn, " opens with "Johnny Come Lately, " the 1942 jazz standard played as if the title were actually "Juan Come Lately." Apart from playing the familiar melody in a Cuban "clave" rhythm (rather than the expected swing-style straight four), Mr. Carlon reworks the piece from top to bottom, as if it had been a staple of the Tito Puente bandbook rather than that of Duke Ellington.

He spices it up and makes it mucho caliente with Latin percussion and a quartet of singers chanting en espanol—an especially inspired touch to a tune that was always an instrumental. Often a songbook package is the most basic, plain-vanilla way to perform the works of a given composer, but Mr. Carlon's treatment is the best kind of fresh take on classic material, rendered with a perfect balance of adoration and irreverence that never misses the mark.There are musicians out there who are hostile to the very idea of songbook albums. "There should be a moratorium on songbook, 'concept, ' and tribute albums, " they cry. Still, nearly anybody besides the musicians themselves welcomes the idea. Why not organize the music with an idea that's larger than a single song? Why not give an album some kind of idea or theme to distinguish it from every other show out there?

The next week is bringing launch events for three superior albums, two of which are at Joe's Pub: Emily Asher's Hoagy Carmichael celebration (Saturday) and Marissa Mulder's Tom Waits package (July 15). (Ms. Asher's album is called "Carnival of Joy"; Ms. Mulder's well-conceived, highly moving show might be called "Carnival of Despondency.")

Mr. Carlon's project also follows a series of well-conceived "Latin Side" albums by the trombonist Conrad Herwig, among them "The Latin Side of John Coltrane" (1996), Miles Davis (2004), Wayne Shorter (2008), and Herbie Hancock (2008). There have also been several "Latin side" approaches to Ellington, notably a concert by Latin American trombonist Steve Turre honoring Ellington's Puerto Rican trombonist Juan Tizol (an event that was, unfortunately, not recorded), and "Afro-Cuban Suite for Duke Ellington" on Bobby Sanabria's current album "Multiverse."

So how do you turn a Strayhorn tune into a mambo or cha-cha? In Mr. Carlon's arrangement, "Chelsea Bridge" becomes a bolero romantico, with that iconic melody phrased on flutes; it's now a slow, erotic dance. As an arranger Mr. Carlon sustains interest by phrasing the tune two ways, with rubato, out of tempo phrases alternating with sections in a firm clave dance beat. "Upper Manhattan Medical Group" is perhaps hardest to recognize, but the Strayhorn tune is there in the mix. "Sweet and Pungent" is the rarest tune in the stack, being a one-shot number from the Ellington album "Blues in Orbit." Trombonist Britt Woodman moaned like crazy on the 1959 original, as trombonist Ryan Keberle does here, yet though it's in Latin tempo, it's no less bluesy.

In his liner notes, Mr. Carlon describes "Tonk" as the "Holy Grail" of Strayhorn works. Most famously heard as an infamously tricky four-handed piano duet between Ellington and Strayhorn, it's a keyboard tour de force somewhere inbetween Art Tatum and Rachmaninoff. Mr. Carlon describes his reinterpretation as fitting the form of the Puerto Rican bomba, but to my ears the piece has now become a choro in the best Brazilian tradition, a close relative of the archetypical choro "Tico Tico."

One of the most successful of Mr. Carlon's transformations is actually Strayhorn's single best known work, "Take The A Train': the Latinized reading, which features a Spanglais choir including Christelle Durandy and Pedrito Martinez, shifts the rhythm from 4/4 to 6/8. The only change that Mr. Carlon neglected to instigate to make the piece any more convincing would have been to re-title the piece "Take The Number Six Train." After all, that's the quickest way to get to Spanish Harlem. - Will Friedwald Wall Street Journal July 5, 2013

Elingtonia and the music of the Afro-Latin diaspora through his group, an octet that has outgrown that designation with more members, from tres player to percussionists and vocalists. Carlon's study of Afro-Latin music led him to spend time in Brazil, Cuba and Colombia to widen his appreciation and perspective. He brings that to bear on La Rumba Is A Lovesome Thing: A Tribute to Billy Strayhorn (Zoho), for which this gig is a CD release party. It is a unique amalgam of Ellingtonian music and Afro-Latin rhythms and forms, gleefully combining montunos, chants and vamps with the sophistiated melodies and harmonies of Strayhorn, celebrating rather than blending the disparities. - George Kanzler Hot House July 2013



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