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Review: Contemporary Music Project, January 2005
The
Craig Russo Latin Jazz Project
Soul Eyes
(Cagoots Records)
By Don Skoog
In the liner notes to Soul Eyes, Craig Russo is only vaguely
apologetic for being a non-latino who plays Latin Jazz. While this explains
who his musicians are and where they play, he shouldn’t have to
mention it, as far as I’m concerned, and doesn’t need to justify
playing the music at all.
Latin Jazz is a synthesis of musical elements from different, but related,
cultures––generally those of Cuba, Puerto Rico, or Brazil,
and the United States. Most commonly, Latin Jazz melds Latino rhythms
and percussion instruments with North American chords, scales, and song
forms. It can be viewed looking North or looking South. An American can
take a Jazz tune and restructure it into a Cha-cha, a Cuban can take a
Latin tune and reharmonize it with Jazz chords, Brazilians often play
Jazz standards with a Samba feel, and Americans regularly dip into the
vast Bossa Nova repertoire. All are legitimate ways to approach Latin
Jazz and everyone should be made to feel welcome because we’ve all
made a contribution. It’s as valid for Russo to introduce Latin
rhythm into standard Jazz (if he does it knowledgeably, which he does)
as it is for a Cuban Sax player to shed Coltrane licks and then use them
in a Mambo.
The strength of Soul Eyes comes from bringing Russo’s Latin
percussion experience to the rhythm section then blending that with the
improvising expertise of his horn players, most notably Chip McNeill,
Director of Jazz Studies at the University of Illinois. This CD definitely
represents the gringos looking South, and because of that it has a strong,
native mastery of the Jazz idiom, but his horn players also seem energized
by the Latin groove. There’s a rhythmic solidarity here, a sense
of structure, that many Jazz drummers would do well to study since the
concepts of solid time, manifest rhythm, and structured harmony have been
lost to some (but not all) in the American Jazz scene. It’s all
about the groove, and Russo hasn’t forgotten that.
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