Roberto Blanco Du lebst besser, wenn Du lachst

Tuesday, 17. May 2011

Roberto Blanco Du lebst besser, wenn Du lachst

Info
First listen – then form an opinion.

That is how it should really be with new albums. But in this case it is more important to the artist than it usually is. You could say: listen first – then ask the name.
But that is hardly necessary: the moment you first hear the voice, you know who the singer is. If you live in Germany and don’t know this voice, you must have been asleep for the past few decades. Yet on Du lebst besser wenn du lachst (You live better when you laugh), this famous voice does the most unexpected things.
And yet Roberto Blanco is not an artist to deny what has made him famous: he is accosted almost every day on the street about it and he is grateful for it and honest about it. But he is more than just his singing voice. “I am an entertainer,” said Roberto Blanco. “I can do much more than just sing pop songs, and I’m going to prove it with my new album.” No sooner said than done. And very impressively, too.
Salsa sounds, inspired by Roberto Blanco’s Cuban roots, show this most popular artist from a different side. Fifteen tracks, eight of which are covers of hits by various stars such as the legendary Charles Aznavour (La Terre Meurt), Chris Rea (Fool), the South African star Solomon Linda (The Lion Sleeps Tonight), the Mexican star tenor Agostin Lara (Granada) and the Italian singer-songwriter Lucio Dalla (Carusso). To pay due tribute to this broad repertoire, on Du lebst besser wenn du lachst, Roberto Blanco sings in English, German, Spanish, French and Italian: and everything with a refreshing Latin American fair, accompanied by knife-sharp, typically Cuban, wind instruments, percussion and virtuoso piano.
The latter is a prime example of the spirit of this album: for some of the songs, Roberto was accompanied by that Cuban founder of Irakere, winner of several Grammies: Chucho Valdés, one of the best jazz pianists in the world. As musicians do, they “wanted to try something out together.” When Roberto Blanco visited Cuba, where the album was to be recorded (Blanco: “We couldn’t have recorded it anywhere else.”), they met by chance when they were exchanging currency at the Hotel Meliá Cohiba. Valdes had just returned from a world tour, was exhausted and had a heavy cold. He was on the verge of saying no, when he saw the same Oshun chain around Blanco’s neck as he wore himself: Oshun is the patron saint of Cuba. “Roberto, we’re brothers,” he cried. And he couldn’t turn down a brother’s request. A few hours later the two were in the studio. Valdes hardly looked at the score: he just started off playing. First the four agreed tracks. Then a fifth, because Valdes didn’t want to stop. If Roberto Blanco had stayed in Cuba a bit longer, they would have made more.
So now Du lebst besser wenn du lachst has turned out to be an album full of heart, love, soul and musical joy, with great new compositions and equally great interpretations of well-known tracks- as we would expect from a genuine entertainer, whom Josephine Baker once took on at a moment’s notice to join her on a concert tour.
That’s why: First listen – then decide

MP3 Download
Roberto Blanco Du lebst besser, wenn Du lachst iTunes Download

Links

http://www.roberto-blanco.de

http://www.du-lebst-besser-wenn-du-lachst.com

VIDEO – Sat1 Bayern Roberto Blanco gibt wieder Vollgas
Roberto Blanco im Porträt MDR

Bela Mavrak & The Stars Of Buena Vista

Tuesday, 26. Oct 2010

Bela Mavrak & The Stars Of Buena vista

English
Béla Mavrák & The Stars of Buena Vista
Un Soplo en el Aire (A Breeze in the Wind)

“Music is a human thing, a warm thing, something that touches the heart.” That is the view of the world-famous Hungarian Béla Mavrák, who takes a great personal interest in the most far-flung tribes in the world. This quotation was the result of his visit to a tribe in Papua New Guinea, who received him as their first white visitor and adorned his farewell aria with unusual Aborigine vocals. His voice is heard and loved all over the globe. No lesser a personage than Lord Yehudi Menuhin accompanied the star tenor in 1999 at a concert performance in aid of the German Yehudi Menuhin Fund. It was from him that Mavrák adopted the humility of a great star which has gained him the worldwide affection of his fans, although since 2006 his international stage performances have become a little more ostentatious. Star violinist André Rieu enlisted Béla Mavrák to join his ensemble and made him known to an audience of millions in all the continents of the earth. Now, with “Un Soplo en el Aire” Mavrák has fulfilled a long-held dream in between his world tours with the great violinist Rieu from Maastricht. Whilst visiting Cuba he once again felt that strong urge to get to know the people and the origins of their culture. It was in some ways a melancholy experience, because the Cuba of the past has changed dramatically. His brand-new album expresses this change: grandiose vocals – Buena Vista feeling – passion and emotion!

Mavrák was born in Austria to Hungarian parents and christened in St. Steven’s Cathedral in Vienna; he grew up in Vojvodina (now a part of Serbia) and his youth years of learning and traveling took him to Italy and all over Europe. This time was followed by numerous tours of the great concert halls and opera houses around the globe. He started to study Song at Belgrade Musical Academy in 1989 and continued his studies at the College of Music and Dance in Cologne, Germany, where he graduated with an artistic diploma in 1994. After receiving private tuition from the world-famous Milanese tenor Franco Corelli and attending master classes given by Italian opera tenor Gianni Raimondi and the Swedish lyrical tenor Nicolai Gedda, he did not have to wait long for the first great parts and awards. He performed the leading role of Rodolfo in Puccini’s opera La Bohème at Belgrade State Opera, for which he was awarded first prize at the International Singing Contest in Italy. Numerous further roles took Béla Mavrák to Germany, Japan, Argentina and Brazil and around the world several times, until in 2006 André Rieu asked him to be guest tenor at 110 concerts on his Europe/Asia/America tour. Rieu and the audiences were delighted with him, and his contract was extended for hundreds more guest appearances. That is the glamorous side of this exceptional singer.

Mavrák’s artistic soul always draws him back to the originality of cultures, currently Cuba. “That is where I discovered the origins of a cultivated music with a simplicity, modesty, warmth and radiance that can capture the hearts of so many people of all generations all over the world,” he answered, when he was asked what so fascinated him about the Caribbean island of Cuba. Because if music is pure emotion – and who could doubt it – then the legendary “Buena Vista Social Club” is the personification of emotional Cuban music in its purest and most original form.

“When I was given the opportunity to select the tracks for this CD, I was keen to combine two things: the music I as a classical tenor have sung to people on stages all over the world in so many delightful years; and the original sound and authentic playing of the Buena Vista Social Club, sounds which have been touching people’s hearts for more than twenty years.”

He was gentle and cautious in the way he led the Cuban musicians toward a culture which was foreign to them, and the result is a respectful mixture of traditional Cuban folklore and European, largely immortal, melodies. “In the course of our work together, I recognized how great and significant a remark by Yehudi Menuhin was that he made at the close of our joint concert: ‘Singing is the mother tongue of all humanity’.”
This album is remarkable for its honesty and for the melancholy moments which Béla Mavrák describes like this: “The original music of Cuba combined with gentle references to modern western pop music and music from home country, supported by Indian tablas, Turkish drums and electric guitars in Latino sound have given the classics and evergreens of this CD a very special, unmistakable character. With no other song on the CD was I asked quite so often why I had chosen to record a new version of it: the immortal classic ‘Lili Marleen’. The answer is simple and it stands for the universal, unbounded power of music. Whenever this song was played over the loudspeakers on the warfronts of World War Two, the gunfire stopped and there was silence – on both sides….
And that is why I still believe in the power and magic of music!”

Barriers between genres? Definitely not here, because “Un Soplo en el Aire” is an atmospherically dense work, not of contrasts but rather of successful connections.

Videos
Bela Mavrak & The Stars Of Buena Vista Besame Mucho Video HD
Bela Mavrak & The Stars Of Buena Vista Dos Gardenias Video HDBela Mavrak & The Stars Of Buena Vista My Little Pretty Video HD

MP3 Download

Bela Mavrak & The Stars Of Buena Vista Un soplo en el Aire bei iTunes MP3 Download

Bela Mavrak & The Stars Of Buena Vista Un soplo en el Aire bei Amazon.de (CD)

Bela Mavrak & The Stars Of Buena Vista Un soplo en el Aire bei AmazonMP3

Bilder

Tour

No shows booked at the moment.


Radio-TV-Presse
Bela Mavrak Interview Dom Radio Köln (http://www.domradio.de/)

Bela Mavrak Interview (Teil 2) Dom Radio Köln (http://www.domradio.de/)

Labana White CD Release Party im Zapata am 11 November

Friday, 01. Oct 2010

www.labana.de www.zapata.de

Labana EPK

Thursday, 26. Aug 2010

Labana

Jugando Super Mario Bros.

Monday, 14. Jun 2010

Calle Real – “Me Lo Gané”

This must be a first on the current world music scene: Cuban timba music from chilly Sweden! Sweden, as we know, is in the vodka belt but is not usually classed with the countries that produce first-class rum. Absolut vodka maybe, but not Bacardi. But the lads from Calle Real are impressive and living proof that there are Swedes who know about Cuba Libre – at least musically: because this twelve-strong combo is only one-twenty-fourth Cuban, which is hard to believe when you hear the timba strains of their brand new album Me Lo Gané . You could be forgiven for believing that the musicians had grown up under the Cuban sun rather than the influence of the polar night. Yet the only member of the group to have any Cuban roots at all is Rickard Valdés, who plays conga and timbales: his father is the legendary Cuban pianist Bebo Valdés, who migrated to Sweden in 1960. The other eleven members are all from the land of ABBA and Roxette – but they are as charged with Caribbean power as if they really played gigs to a delighted audience every evening in one of the legendary music clubs of Calle 23, THE street to go in Havana if you are looking for entertainment. Now, with Me Lo Gané they have brought us the perfect soundtrack for the next beach party and all the events to follow it! Those parties should be in full swing from 11th September, when the album comes to the stores (Timba/Edel Kultur).

Back in 2006 the band brought out their debut album, Con Fuerza, their first musical exclamation mark, so to speak. The enthusiastic public could scarcely believe their ears and thought the album with its incredibly powerful arrangements and the even more unbelievable vocalist Thomas Eby must be the latest masterpiece by Los Van Van. That was wide of the mark, but it was the biggest compliment that could have been sent from Cuba to Stockholm; so it only took a few puffs of a prime cigar for Calle Real to be knighted by Havana: the band was asked to attend the Festival Benny Moré in Cuba, an annual event bringing together the best salsa and timba bands from Cuba, with international guests too. This experience was certainly a defining one, the “salsa” in the soup of these twelve excellent professional musicians, because with Me Lo Gané the band not only maintained the level of the first album but upped their achievement, with liberal use of irresistible dance numbers and hits. The opener Somos Familia, with thoroughly modern timba, signalises that the eleven tracks are to be a kaleidoscope of energy and vibration to set off a real timba tsunami: variable tempi, full-scale brass music, perfectly authentic solo and ensemble vocals, earthy bass, spot-on percussion and piano every bit as good as the virtuosity of the legendary Los Van Van pianist César “Pupy” Pedroso. The whole brew is presented to us with endless power, and Calle Real gets better and better all the time, from song to song to song…

To sum up: the band could not have chosen a more fitting title for their album than “Me Lo Gané” – “I’ve earned it”. This refreshing, imaginative, absolutely superb album truly deserves to take its place on the Mount Olympus of the Cuban musical elite. Cuba ahora – old Swede!

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