Re: [RedHotJazz] Re: Choro (was Re Argentinian jazz from 1926)
Danilo,
Thanks for the links and clarification on the (non) relationship of
Choro and Forró - I was in a difficult e-mail conversation a few years
ago with a young forró musician who had recently moved to the USA and
I got that part wrong!
I think Choro is interesting, not only in the parallel (but
different) relationship to the way ragtime and jazz developed, but
because it is improvised, popular dance music that was played by
amateur and semi-professional musicians and was later
"professionalized" by more skilled musicians. I am still reading and
learning more about this music - I had happened to find a Pixinguinha
collection CD when my band was touring in Brazil and I have been
intrigued by the music ever since.
David Richoux
On Dec 22, 2008, at 7:09 PM, Danilo Nogueira wrote:
> Strange finding comments on Pixinguinha's music here (by the way,
> pronounce it Pee-sheen-GHI-nyah) and choro music. Choro, like
> traditional jazz, has never disappeared and has gone through more than
> one revival.
Came across an excellent recording of Washboard Cut Out by Bobbie Leecan's Need More Band that I would like to share with the group - this recording is new to...
Leecan was born & bred in Philly, but does anyone have any ideas about his buddy, Robert Cooksey? We know he was around Philly and NYC, but was he *from*...
... From: "Prof_Hi_Jinx" ... The liner notes to Document DOCD 5279 by John Wilby say : "An article from the February 23, 1926 edition of the New York Times ...
[Sorry Howard, I didn't want to shortcut your message but for some reason it had landed in the "spam" area - Patrice] All of Leecan and Cooksey including the...
... Washboard ... The two Dixie Jazzers Washboard Band alternatives appear on 'Rare 1920s Blues and Jazz' (DOCD-5612); notes offer no further biographical ...
<BTW, many times I came across 1920's jazz recordings from Argentina on the RHJA, but usually they are only listed but not available to listen to. Among some...
Hola Luis, Indeed, there were some good jazz bands in Argentina in the 1920s. If you go to http://bixography.com/wbix1to50.html scroll down to program # 26 and...
On a somewhat related note - in Brazil from the 1840s through the 1930s there was a very popular style of music called Choro - it was a blend of European...
A bit of a discovery - a free collection of the music of Pixinguinha and other Choro musicians from the early 1900s onwards! (web translation is a bit rough,...
Strange finding comments on Pixinguinha's music here (by the way, pronounce it Pee-sheen-GHI-nyah) and choro music. Choro, like traditional jazz, has never...
Danilo, Thanks for the links and clarification on the (non) relationship of Choro and Forró - I was in a difficult e-mail conversation a few years ago with a...
Albert Yes, there is a very strong connection. In addition several Brazilian composers wrote "tangos" in a vein that was entirely different from whatever our...