Tag: Encuentro Internacional de Jazz y Música Viva

Report From Monterrey

In last week’s post I discussed how the end of the Smithsonian Institution’s Jazz Appreciation Month was marked by the celebration of UNESCO’s International Jazz Day, which was hosted in Istanbul this year, but that the day was also celebrated in cities around the world. I mentioned my own performance with Cynthia Hilts’s Lyric Fury at Somethin’ Jazz Club in New York, a city where just about every day is International Jazz Day. A quick look down the maw of YouTube reveals celebrations in Culj-Napoca, Romania, Yerevan, Armenia, Gwang Shu, Korea, and Faro, Portugal. A more complete list of events is available at the IJD website.

One listed event caught my eye because it took place in Monterrey, Mexico, which is where I’m writing this and will be playing at the XI Encuentro Internacional de Jazz y Música Viva hosted by Conarte. What surprises me isn’t that the event I’m playing in (I’m filling in for bassist John Lindberg, who had to tend to a family emergency) isn’t mentioned in the IJD list, but that what’s listed is a guitar master class, held at the Facultad de Música at the Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León, followed by a panel discussion, “Is there original jazz in Monterrey or original rehash?,” and a jam session.

As the name suggests, this is the eleventh year that Encuentro Internacional de Jazz y Música Viva has been held in Monterrey. It is the brainchild of Omar Tamez, the youngest child of Nicandro Tamez, a composer-educator-philosopher who developed his own musical language and notation before he succumbed to cancer in the 1980s and also instilled a passion for music in his other children, Teresa and Emilio, who play piano and percussion, respectively. (Emilio is playing in this year’s Encuentro along with Omar.) It is a testament to how pernicious the power of politics is in music that an annually held jazz international festival goes ignored by the founders of International Jazz Day.

And, as I mentioned last week, this year’s lineup includes artists from Germany (via the U.S.), France, Mexico, Costa Rica, and the United States. Two of this year’s featured artists are Karl Berger and Ingrid Sertso. Vibraphonist-pianist-composer Berger moved to America from Germany in 1966 and, with Sertso and Ornette Coleman, founded a school for jazz, the Creative Music Studio, in Woodstock, New York, in 1972. He is tireless as an organizer, composer, and arranger. His work has been featured at the Kool Jazz Festival and by the West German Radio Orchestra (where he was a guest conductor). He has recorded with John McLaughlin, Carla Bley, and Lee Konitz. He has partnered with Bill Laswell as an arranger for the likes of Jeff Buckley, Natalie Merchant, and Angélique Kidjo. Sertso is a singer who improvises words as well as melodies. Her approach is unique in its conception as well as its execution and weaves through the fabric of instruments she works with. She is as comfortable performing straight-ahead jazz as she is with free improvisation and has worked with the likes of Eric Dolphy, Nana Vasconcelos, Don Cherry (MultiKulti), and Steve Lacy.

I first heard guitarist Marc Ducret in Paris in 1994 playing at the Rising Sun. His masterful approach to the instrument is inclusive of the jazz traditions that shape the work of guitarists like Ed Cherry and John Scoffield, as well as the electronic effects that inform the work of Bill Frisell and Bruce Arnold. Since leaving Copenhagen, he considers himself a resident of the world with no permanent address, although he conducts his business as a French citizen. It is a thrill to finally play with Marc, as well as the phenomenal flutist Wilfreido Terrazas, who hails from Mexico City. He is a cross-discipline musician who is as comfortable improvising as he is playing the works of Boulez. Baritone saxophonist Sofia Zumbado has just recently begun crossing the line from “legitimate” music to improvisation. She was at last year’s Encuentro as part of saxophone manufacturer and repairman Roberto Romero’s display booth. The participation of Romero (who owns Roberto’s Winds in Mexico City and New York) in Encuentro now includes a competition for young saxophonists with one of his company’s tenor saxophones as first prize. Sofia, who was demonstrating Romero’s instruments, has a ten-year plan to learn the language of jazz improvisation as well as she has learned the language of free-improvisation. No doubt she will be a voice to reckon with. Drummer-percussionist-composer Harvey Sorgen rounds out this year’s line-up. He is best known for his work with guitar legend Jorma Kaukonen and Hot Tuna. However, his range of expression goes far beyond any one style of music. His musical partnerships include trumpeter extraordinaire Herb Robertson, pianist David Lopato, and bassist Joe Fonda (who is this year’s Encuentro poster child).
Although all of the participants are asked to bring their own music to perform, improvisation is the key to Omar’s Encuentro series. So far, the music rehearsed includes a piece from Sorgen’s graphically notated Density-Dynamics compositions, a few of my tunes—“I Saw A Bear,” “The Carpenter,” and “Duh, Kidz” —and an extended composition of Berger’s No Man Is An Island, which he first recorded in 1999; but our first night was dedicated to free improvisation.

I couldn’t find anything about the previously mentioned panel discussion in the university’s archives, so I plan to talk to Omar about this and see if there’s a chance to include his Encuentro Internacional series into the International Jazz Day listings next year, although he’s doing pretty well so far on his own!

Reporting From Mexico

Monterrey is the seat of the third largest metropolitan area in Mexico and is, arguably, the most “Americanized” city in the country, allowing me the idiosyncratic sensation of comfort I get from consciously eschewing establishments offering mass-hypnosis in the form of fast-food and warehouse shopping. The daily routine, though, of Encuentro Internacional de Jazz y Música Viva makes it somewhat difficult to sightsee or go shopping for souvenirs. Every day, our group of ten musicians is scheduled to rehearse from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. with workshops being conducted from 3-6 p.m. and, since Wednesday, concerts from 8-10 p.m.

Tonight (May 11) the musicians from the United States (myself, trumpeter Herb Robertson, and drummer Lou Grassi) will be featured. Yesterday’s concert featured the music of the musicians from Europe: pianist Sophia Domancich, saxophonist Harri Söström, trombonist Conrad “Conny” Bauer, and guitarist Andreas Willers. Tomorrow is the last concert and features works presented by musicians from Mexico (guitarist and event organizer Omar Tamez and saxophonist Rémi Álvarez) and Bolivia (saxophonist Marcos Miranda). Our program, so far, consists of two compositions of mine (a cycling dirge, “The Carpenter,” and an up-tempo multiple-layer blues, “9-2”), one by Robertson (“Cosmic Child,” a 32-measure piece with chord changes that is parsed into three somewhat independent events using a varied palette of improvisational strategies), and two by Grassi (“Avanti Galoppi” and “Parallel Realities,” both comprised of single-line melodies that serve to mark the compositions’ structures and forms, which are interpretations of their titles). The promoter wanted tonight’s performance to be dedicated to the memory of Paul Motian and we were happy to oblige by adding “From Time to Time” (Motian in Tokyo, JMT, 1991) to the program.

This is the third (and I sincerely hope not the last) Encuentro in Monterrey I’ve been a part of. If my memory serves me well, the first was in 2004 and the second in 2008. The first was a two-week affair with concerts held on the weekends. The artists were housed at an elegant Howard Johnson’s in downtown Monterrey. Sadly, the hotel has not been well maintained and a hurricane that devastated much of that area of the city has turned it into a mold trap. Fortunately, a Hilton opened in Fundidora Park, where Encuentro is held, and our accommodations are better than ever. Yesterday was Mother’s Day in Mexico and the hotel’s dining facilities were decked out in grand style, complete with a strolling violinist, making lunch a gala affair. But even the added festivities couldn’t alter the bittersweet feeling that accompanies the knowledge that a unique and vital musical event is now only half what it once was. While those who are in-the-know when it comes to improvised music support the Encuentro de Jazz y Música Viva Monterrey series, even to the point of people traveling from nearby Texas and New Mexico to attend, the local tastes are more acclimated to indigenous folk, popular Latin, and dance music.

Monterrey is a major, and possibly the center of corporate culture in Mexico, which is reflected in the attitude towards music education here. So far, Tamez has been working with select local businesses and the home embassies of the musicians he brings to Monterrey for support. This year a new and surprising source of support in the person of Roberto Romero, the owner of Roberto’s Winds and Michiko Studios, has appeared at Encuentro Monterrey. Roberto is no stranger to saxophonists in New York, and a saxophonist who travels to that city inevitably winds up at his 46th Street shop. I go there often to rehearse at Michiko Studios, the most affordable high-quality rehearsal studios in Manhattan. It turns out that Romero has dealerships in Australia as well as in Mexico City. Tamez met Romero on one of his trips to New York and the two agreed that this year a nation-wide saxophone competition would be included in the list of Encuentro events with the first prize being a Roberto’s Winds signature soprano saxophone. So now, not only can you buy recordings by the various artists performing at Encuentro de Jazz y Música Viva Monterrey, but you can also try out and buy a brand new saxophone from Roberto’s Winds!

I think this could be the start of something really great for Encuentro de Jazz y Música Viva Monterrey and the world of improvised music. I’ll include pictures next week, but now I have to go rehearse…