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Quisqueya La Bella: A Celebration of the Music of the Dominican Republic

Manhattan School of Music celebrates the music of the Dominican Republic on Monday, March 28 (7:30 & 9:30 pm) at Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola, Jazz at Lincoln Center, and on Monday, April 4 (7:30 pm) at Manhattan School of Music's Borden Auditorium, with two special performances by the critically-acclaimed and multiple Latin Grammy nominees MSM Afro-Cuban Jazz Orchestra, under the direction of multi-Grammy nominee Bobby Sanabria.

QUISQUEYA LA BELLA ("the beautiful Dominican Republic") features the many flavors of the D.R., from the intense gallop of the popular merengue and pambiche to the romantic bachata and the Afro-centric carnival celebrations of gaga, palo, and more.

NEW YORK PREMIERE AT DIZZY'S CLUB COCA-COLA, MARCH 28

The March 28th concert at Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola features the New York premiere of CANDOMBE JUNO by composer Nacho Gonzalez - exploring the Afro-Uruguayan rhythm of Candombe in a modern structure using complex meters, elements of funk, and Afro-Cuban music.

The orchestra will also celebrate the upcoming 95th birthday on April 22 of Maestro Candido Camero, NEA Jazz Master and father of modern conga drumming; in a special appearance, Camero will join the orchestra on stage in performance.

NEW YORK PREMIERE AT MANHATTAN SCHOOL OF MUSIC, APRIL 4

On April 4, at Manhattan School of Music's Borden Auditorium, the orchestra will feature the New York premiere of Dr. Socrates Garcia's DOMINICAN SUITE for JAZZ ORCHESTRA and VANTAGE POINT.

The suite is a tour de force multi-movement composition that explores Dominican rhythms such as merengue, pambiche, bachata, and palo, all under the rubric of the modern jazz big band, highlighted by forward-thinking modern harmonies and jazz arrangements.

A highlight of the piece features an exceptional solo adapted by the legendary Dominican alto saxophonist, Tavito Vazquez, arranged by Garcia for the entire sax section.

PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS

An additional NYC premiere: Dr. Socrates Garcia's VANTAGE POINT exploring the rhythmic relationship and cultural bond between Haiti and the Dominican Republic.

Dizzy Gillespie's groundbreaking 1946 composition THINGS TO COME gets the "Sanabria treatment, " cast as a blistering merengue dedicated to another legendary Dominican musician, tenor saxophonist Mario Rivera, a mainstay of New York City's salsa and jazz scenes from the 1960s to his death in 2007.

The concert is dedicated to Rivera along with Dominican saxophonist Tavito Vazquez both of whom raised their instrument to new heights.

Gerson Borero's tone poem EL SENTIMIENTO DEL LATINO EN NUEVA YORK is dedicated to New York City's Latino community and is arranged by MSM alumnus Dr. Jeremy Fletcher.

A stirring arrangement of the most famous merengue ever composed, Luis Alberti's COMPADRE PEDRO JUAN, by MSM Master's Degree graduate Takao Heisho (BM '12, MM '14), gives the piece a modern interpretation.

QUISQUEYA LA BELLA: The Music of The Dominican Republic will be performed at Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola, Jazz at Lincoln Center on Monday, March 28 (7:30 & 9:30 pm sets); cover $35 ($20 for students), and in MSM's Borden Auditorium on Monday, April 4 (7:30 pm), admission free, no tickets required.

Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola, Jazz at Lincoln Center, tickets: jazz.org/dizzys or (212) 258-9595.
For press seats and further information, please contact Caryn Freitag, Manhattan School of Music's

Communications and Public Relations Associate, at cfreitag@msmnyc.edu or (917) 493-4429.

ABOUT BOBBY SANABRIA

Bandleader and seven-time Grammy nominee, drummer, percussionist, composer, arranger, educator, documentary film producer, multicultural warrior, and activist, Bobby Sanabria is a native Nuyorican born and raised in New York's South Bronx. His unique perspective comes from having performed and/or recorded with every major figure in the development of what today is known as Latin jazz. From the genre's acknowledged creator, maestro Mario Bauzá, for whom Bobby recorded three Grammy-nominated CDs and worked as the drummer in his Afro-Cuban Jazz Orchestra for ten years, to Mongo Santamaria, with whom he started his career, to Tito Puente, Chico O'Farrill, Ray Barretto, Larry Harlow, Candido, Dizzy Gillespie, Marco Rizo, and many more. Mr. Sanabria's versatility and scope of musical influence as both a drummer and percussionist has extended to other forms of music. He has worked with such genre-bending artists as composers David Amram, Henry Threadgill, and poet Sekou Sundiata, as well as being named last year as the newest member of Max Roach's legendary percussion ensemble, M'BOOM. A noted educator, clinician, and educator, he is on the faculty of Manhattan School of Music and of the Jazz & Contemporary Music Program at the New School and directs both schools' Afro-Cuban jazz orchestras. He received Grammy nominations for the recordings Kenya Revisited Live!!! (2009), a masterful tribute and re-working of the Machito Afro-Cubans' legendary Kenya album, and Tito Puente: Masterworks Live!!! (2011) as the director of the MSM Afro-Cuban Jazz Orchestra. He has worked as a producer, advisor, and on-air personality on the award-winning documentaries, The Palladium Where Mambo Was King (Bravo, 2003), From Mambo To Hip Hop (PBS, 2007), Latin Music U.S.A. (PBS, 2009), and the soon to be released I Like it Like That: The Story of Latin Boogaloo (2015). He is the Co-Artistic Director/Curator of the Bronx Music Heritage Center and the Artistic Director/Artist in Residence of the Roberto Ocasio Memorial Latin Jazz Camp for High School Students in Cleveland, Ohio. Mr. Sanabria is a graduate of the Berklee College of Music, where he received his Bachelor of Music degree in 1979. He proudly endorses TAMA Drums, Latin Percussion Inc., Vic Firth Sticks, Sabian Cymbals, and Remo Drumheads. His latest recording is the double Grammy nominated Multiverse (2012) on the Jazzheads label, featuring his 19-piece big band.

ABOUT DR. SOCRATES GARCIA

Socrates Garcia is a composer, arranger, producer, recording engineer, guitarist, and educator from the Dominican Republic. He is the Director of Music Technology at UNC, where he teaches courses in music technology such as Introduction to Music Technology, Digital Composition, and Recording Techniques. He also oversees the recording studio, keyboard lab, and computer music lab.

Dr. Garcia's credits include the album Yo Por Ti by Puerto Rican artist Olga Tañon, Grammy Award winner of Merengue Album of the Year 2001; musical director/keyboardist for Los Ilegales in their 1997-1998 Latin American tour; keyboardist for multi-Grammy winner Juan Luis Guerra; and guest performer with the Dominican Republic's National Symphony Orchestra, among others.

As a guitarist or keyboardist, he has performed in many Latin-American countries, including Mexico, Colombia, Venezuela, Bolivia, Costa Rica, Aruba, and throughout the Dominican Republic. As an arranger/producer and recording engineer his work is found numerous albums and a myriad of side projects. His first solo CD, Sueños, was released in 2005.

Dr. Garcia studied composition with Dick Grove, Jamey Simmons, H. David Caffey, Fred Sturm, and Paul Elwood. He served as Adjunct Professor of Music at Middle Tennessee State University and taught Jazz Harmony and Theory at the Santo Domingo Conservatory of Music between 1999 and 2004.

His jazz orchestra compositions are published through UNC Jazz Press. He has won composition awards from the Jazz Education Network and Casa de Teatro, and is a voting member of NARAS (National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences) and LARAS (Latin Academy of Recording Arts and Science).

Dr. Garcia completed an undergraduate degree in Theory and Composition at Luther College, a Master of Arts degree in Jazz Studies (Composition) at Middle Tennessee State University, and a Doctor of Arts degree in Jazz Studies (Composition) at UNC.

ABOUT NACHO GONZALEZ

Nacho González Nappa is a Uruguayan musician and social entrepreneur. Born in Montevideo (1985), Nacho is passionate about Afro Uruguayan music, Jazz and Tango. He studied and performed with the best musicians in Uruguay and 2013 he began studying Jazz Composition at

Berklee College Music. Besides music, Nacho spent 8 years working in the social sector, and is the co-founder of techo.org in the U.S. and socialab.com, two of the largest and most effective poverty reduction efforts in Latin America. He is also a journalist, and worked for many years as a literature reviewer at El Observador newspaper.

ABOUT CANDIDO CAMERO

So well known and respected, his first name alone -- Candido -- is all that is necessary for jazz aficionados to know who he is. Credited with being the first percussionist to bring conga drumming to jazz, Candido Camero is also known for his contributions to the development of mambo and Afro-Cuban jazz.

Born in Havana, Cuba, in 1921, Camero first began making music as a young child, beating rhythms on empty condensed milk cans in place of bongos. He worked for six years with the CMQ Radio Orchestra and at the famed Cabaret Tropicana. He came to the United States in 1946 with the dance team Carmen and Rolando, and very soon after was playing with Billy Taylor, who wrote in 1954, "I have not heard anyone who even approaches the wonderful balance between jazz and Cuban elements that Candido demonstrates."

By the early 1950s, Camero was a featured soloist with the Stan Kenton Orchestra, with whom he toured the U.S. playing three congas (at a time when other congueros were playing only one) in addition to a cowbell and guiro (a fluted gourd played with strokes from a stick). He created another unique playing style by tuning his congas to specific pitches so that he could play melodies like a pianist. He becam



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