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4/21/11
PN Video Jukebox - Oscar Peterson
A real treasure trove of clips from the great pianist Oscar Peterson, including a complete set of segments from Peterson's appearance on the BBC's 'Words and Music.'
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4/19/11
My Sax Life: A Memoir by Paquito D'Rivera
Born in Havana, Cuba in 1948,
Paquito D’Divera was raised from a very early age – under the close supervision
of his virtuoso father – to be a musician of the first order. A child prodigy on the clarinet and
saxophone, D’Rivera became famous in Cuba and in Puerto Rico performing in
classical concert halls and on television in all sorts of musical styles. While working in the inconsistently tolerant
artistic environment of Castro’s Cuba, as a young man, he became one of the
founding members and eventually the conductor of the Orquesta Cubana de Musica
Moderna. D’Rivera was also a founding
member and co-director of the innovative musical group Irakere, whose explosive
mixture of jazz, rock, classical and traditional Cuban music had never been
heard before. The group toured extensively throughout America and Europe, won
several Grammy nominations and a Grammy.
Then, in the early 80s, stepping off a plane in a Madrid airport,
D’Rivera left his musical life – as well as his wife and son – behind in Cuba,
defecting in hopes of a better life. In
very little time, at least professionally, D’Rivera had settled in New York and
was performing, recording, and writing music – in both the classical and jazz
worlds -- as never before. These days,
of course, D’Rivera has reunited with his family and rebuilt his life as have
so many Cuban exiles – two million, is it? – around the world.
With talents that reach beyond the world of music,
D’Rivera published a novel, Oh, La Habana,
and now the English translation of his memoir Mi vida saxual, known to us gringos as My Sax Life. Weigh in in at a generous 349 pages, My Sax Life is a bawdy, intelligent,
artistic, and unconventional work of autobiography. Without being egotistical or self-indulgent,
and with good-humor and a great deal of heart, this book offers more than a poquito of Paquito on every page.
Although I’ve never met the man, it seems safe to say that the
personality of the author comes across in each anecdote from his native Cuba,
each detailed memory of performing, each gleefully recounted practical joke or
naughty story, each off-the-cuff rant against Castro and communism. There is rarely a dull moment.
D’Rivera is at his best when he
writes about music, musicians, and other artists, when he describes the
distinctive qualities of the Cuban national character – if there is such a
thing. He is most shockingly
entertaining when he permits himself to be profane and even crude. Unfortunately, he is most tedious when, as
often and understandably happens, he falls into the one-note political riff so
many Cuban exiles are – understandably – prone to. But, as anyone in Miami will know, you can’t
dislike someone like Paquito for long for his politics – he’s just got too much
talent and charisma. And My Sax Life is no different. Like any
good jazz performance and jazz performer, you won’t know quite where you’re
going when you get started with D’Rivera, and you might not like a few things
along the way, but when the show’s over you heard some things you’d never heard
before and you were glad you came.PN Feedburner | PN iTunes | PN Twitter | PN Facebook | PN Video | PN Goodreads | PN Tumblr
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