In celebration of the famous Tropicana casino in Havana, Cuba,
D'Rivera assembled a 22-piece big band to play many of the famous tunes that the "most beautiful nightclub in the world" was known for in the '50s. The band is a killer, rising up to the vaunted musicianship of
D'Rivera, including trumpeters
Mike Ponella and
Diego Urcola, trombonists
Jimmy Bosch and
William Cepeda, saxophonists
Andres Boiarsky,
Oscar Feldman and
Manuel Valera, bassist
Joe Santiago, timbales player
Ralph Irizarry, drummer
Mark Walker and percussionist
Milton Cardona, among others. The first tune,
"Mambo A La Kenton," sets an apropos tone in that it was composed by
Armando Romeu, who led
the Tropicana Orchestra. Staccato horns and cha cha lines not only suggest
Stan Kenton's fascination with this music, but reflect the influence of
Machito as well. The cha cha romp
"Old Miami Sax" has the sax section trading fours and twos, then joining in counterpointed frenzy. Brass and reeds mix up melodies interactively on
D'Rivera's fabulous jazzy chart for the title cut, while the leader's tribute to old partner
"Chucho" (
Valdes) was done many years ago in a smaller context, but is recapitulated on this happily expanded, mambo-ized version. There are such familiar tunes as
Mario Bauza's classic
"Mambo Inn," with
Paquito's clarinet and extra horn inserts in the melody, and
Chico O'Farrill's
"El Coronel Y Marina," which has more mambo/cha cha-informed, leaping staccato lines. There are three compositions by
Ernesto Duarte, all slower tunes. Ballad
"Cicuta Tibia," with vocalist
Brenda Feliciano, doubles and then halves the time, while
Lucrecia sings on
"Como Fue." He also penned the slower instrumental cha cha
"Sustancia." The lone non-big-band cut is the well-known
"Peanut Vendor," with acoustic guitarist
David Oquendo's strumming inspiring a five-piece vocal chorus in straight clave beat;
Paquito's clarinet is the lone, heartsick wolf. Of the many ensembles
D'Rivera has fronted, this is the one that not only hits closest to home, but evokes a shared passion for the Tropicana, which was the impetus for the Latin jazz movement itself. His extraordinarily informative liner notes about the history of the Tropicana is worth the price of the CD alone. Highly recommended, thoroughly enjoyable, and perhaps his magnum opus. ~ Michael G. Nastos