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"The more I play in different
situations, the more possibilities I discover for what I can do.
Rather than think in terms of my music developing, I choose to bask
in the glow of one thing for a few minutes, then let it go."
--Chick Corea
 Photo by Howard A. Gitelson
One of the most heralded performers of
modern jazz, Chick Corea makes a rare Twin Cities
appearance this week at Orchestra Hall in downtown Minneapolis (June 21st).
Performing as part of the Twin Cities Hot Summer Jazz Festival, Corea
will introduce Minnesotans to his latest project, the Latin ensemble
Touchstone. And needing no introduction, Cuban
transplant—himself a keyboard wizard-- Nachito Herrera
will provide an opening set that likely will go far beyond a
“warm-up.”
Twelve-time Grammy Award winner Armando
Anthony “Chick” Corea has enjoyed a fairy-tale
career for over four decades. Growing up in Chelsea, MA, his home was
filled with jazz—the music of Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Bud
Powell, Lester Young and Horace Silver, as well as the inspirational
music of Mozart and Beethoven. His father was a trumpeter who played
around Boston with a Dixieland band. Says Corea, “When I was a tot,
I grew up in an atmosphere of my dad playing his record collection of
78 rpm vinyl. It was Diz and Bird. Bud Powell was in some of those
bands… I used to like to listen to his piano solos. My father
pointed them out. I was 6 or 7 years old. As I was beginning to play
the piano, I couldn't nearly approach trying to play anything like
what Bud played. It was too technical for me.”
Another early influence was Horace
Silver: “I did a lot of transcribing of Horace's compositions,
transcribed his piano solos. He was a pianist I was very much
interested in.” And over the years, he has identified many other
influences: “I finally sat down and made the list of pianists I
feel I learned from or got inspired by in one way or another. And
gee, it's a whole page of pianists, from Vladimir Horowitz through to
Wynton Kelly and Bill Evans and Duke Ellington, Thelonious Monk,
McCoy Tyner. The list could be extended now, because there are other
pianists I've found as well. It's a piano club, you know?”
Young Corea cut his teeth in the mid-60s with Blue
Mitchell, with whom he recorded his earliest
compostions. Leading his first project, Tones for Joan’s Bones,
he also fell under the Latin influences of Herbie Mann and
particularly Mongo Santamaria, influences that would frequently
inform his music throughout his career. He also cites work with the Stan
Getz Quartet as pivotal in his early development. After a year with Sarah Vaughn,
Corea hit the mother lode playing electric piano on Miles Davis’
Bitches Brew and In a Silent Way recordings, leading to
his famous and highly influential band, Return to Forever. Of his
work with Miles, Corea notes that “It was a pretty emotional
experience, after what for me at that time was a lifetime of
listening to Miles and following his recordings and learning from the
musicians around him and so forth, to actually be on the stage with
him…Miles approached that whole thing kind of like he was cooking
up a spiritual brew. He was like a witch doctor. He brought all of
these musicians together and he was brewing the pot.”
With the early edition of Return to
Forever (1971), Corea created a samba-flavored ensemble featuring
Flora Purim on vocals, her husband Airto on drums, young Stanley
Clarke on guitar, and reedist Joe Farrell. After a few
acclaimed recordings, Corea electrified RTF and ushered in the fusion
era of the 70s, featuring manic drummer Lenny White and guitarist
Bill Connors (replaced later by Al DiMeola). By the time the group
disbanded in 1975, they had produced several popular (and
Grammy-winning) recordings, and Moog synthesizers had become part of
the common arsenal of modern jazz.
Post RTF, Corea engaged in a variety of
ensemble and solo projects, electric and acoustic, and in the company
of such legends as Herbie Hancock and Gary Burton. He reassembled some of his RTF bandmates along with Lee Konitz, Paco de Lucia, and others to record the Latin-fusion Touchstone in 1982 (Stretch), returning to this sound 20 years later with his current band, Touchstone. From the mid 80s,
Corea continued to find success on acoustic piano as well as
synthesizer, with his “Elektric Band” and with Joe Henderson,
Freddie Hubbard, Hubert Laws, Chaka Khan, and Nancy Wilson. Then, in
1992, Corea, along with manager Ron Moss, formed Stretch Records, a
label committed to stretching musical boundaries. Early productions
included projects by Bob Berg, John Patitucci, Eddie Gomez, and
Robben Ford.
When Stretch Records became a
subsidiary of Concord in 1996, Corea began recording for his label,
starting with a tribute to his early idol, Bud Powell. At about the
same time, he recorded a duet album with Bobby McFerrin which won a
Grammy, and another classical album with the St. Paul Chamber
Orchestra (both for Sony). Productive as well as eclectic, Corea
followed in 1998 with another Grammy, this time paired with Gary
Burton on Native Sense (Stretch). In the late 90s, Corea
initiated another ensemble, the acoustic sextet Origin, releasing
three recordings over a few years. Meanwhile, he continued his series
of classical recordings with the release of his own Concerto with the
London Philharmonic Orchestra (Sony, 1999).
Always seeking new ways of expressing
his musical spirit, Corea now leads another ensemble, Touchstone, a
return to his explorations of flamenco and other Latin rhythms. With
a core made up of members of Paco de Lucia’s band, Touchstone
includes bassist Carles Benavent (who appeared on the original Touchstone recording), Jorge Pardo (sax/flute), Rubem
Dantas (percussion), and Tom Brechtlein (drums). Noted the London
Guardian, Touchstone “…sometimes sounded like early Return
to Forever playing snatches of Concierto de Aranjuez, but the Spanish
rhythms were given new twists by a superb percussion section and
Corea’s inventiveness.”
 Photo by Andrea Canter
Joining Corea
at Orchestra Hall will be special guest Nachito Herrera.
A child prodigy who studied classical music in Havana, Herrera went
on to serve as music director for several bands before leading
Cubanissmo! His travels to the US caught the eye of potential
sponsors, including the Dakota’s Lowell Pickett, and with some
wrangling with state department redtape, this amazing musician found
himself in Minnesota. After his inaugural band Puro Cubano recorded
Live at the Dakota, Herrera developed another great ensemble
featuring Cuban musicians (The Cuban All-Stars), and
together this ensemble released Bembe en mi Casa this past
winter. Noted Michael Dumbrow (Urban Pioneer), “His hands
move at a blinding pace over the keys, trilling not only with his
dominant hand but with both, turning the piano keys into an extension
of his very self.” The Orchestra Hall performance will be a rare
opportunity to see and hear this keyboard monster outside of his
usual Cuban band context. Where classical structures merge with
native Cuban rhythms, where dexterity and fluidity merge with passion
and joy, this is the intersection that is home to Nachito Herrera.
Chick Corea
and Touchstone perform at Orchestra Hall on Nicollet Mall in downtown
Minneapolis on June 21, 7:30 pm. Tickets are available at
www.minnesotaorchestra.org.
On June 22, the band will be in Ann Arbor at the Ann Arbor Summer
Festival at Power Center (www.annarborsummerfestival.org).
Most quotes of Chick Corea from All About Jazz interview, available
at www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=226.
For a sonic introduction to Chick Corea’s music, see his 60th
birthday double CD recording, Rendezvous in New York (Stretch,
2003). |