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“With unbridled freedom, he jams with potent montunos and
high-energy timba to solos that can melt snow off the sidewalk.” --
Jesse “Chuy” Varela, Latin Beat Magazine
 Photo by Andrea Canter
Since his arrival in Minnesota four
years ago, former ¡Cubanismo! Bandleader/pianist Nachito
Herrera has been wowing audiences, students, and fellow musicians
with monster technique, bottomless energy, and infectious enthusiasm
for his homeland and its eclectic rhythms. His live recording with
his first local band, Puro Cubano, generated a lot of hot ink,
prompting City Pages critic Britt Robson to note that “the
fact that a magnificent, south-of-the-border pianist like Herrera
purposefully transplanted himself to our frozen tundra was the best
local music news of 2002. And Live at the Dakota is proof of
that fact.” In the past year, Herrera has often joined forces with
a group of master Afro-Cuban musicians currently working throughout
the U.S. but who find their way to Minnesota for a “Cuban All
Stars” gig at the Dakota in downtown Minneapolis. After a gig at
Birdland in New York, Nachito and company took their sizzling groove
into the studio last summer, and the result—Bembé en mi
Casa (FM Music)—was released in the Twin Cities last fall. This past summer, Nachito opened solo for Chick Corea at the Twin Cities Hot Summer Jazz Festival, and was nominated as Best Latin Artist and Best
Pianist/Keyboardist for 2005 by the Minnesota Music Academy. Finally, Nachito Herrera moves into the national spotlight with a
fall tour to tout the national release of Bembé. Soon a
much broader audience of American jazz fans will understand why Latin
Beat critic Jesse “Chuy” Varela said, “Listening to Bembé
en mi Casa, it’s hard to believe that it’s coming from St.
Paul and not La Habana.”
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Jazz Police Review!
September tour stops include the
Wisconsin State Fair Park in Milwaukee (September 17); Word Music
Festival in Chicago (Navy Pier, September 18; Hot House, September
19; Cassidy Theater, Chicago Cultural Center with live radio feed on
WLUW 88.7, September 19; Daly Center, September 20), before a swing
back to Minneapolis for a two-night stand at the Dakota (September
21-22) and a late night set at the Minnesota Music Awards (September
21).
Nachito
How did this phenomenon of rhumba, son,
and bolero end up in the American northland? Ignacio “Nachito”
Herrera was born in the small Cuban town of Santa Clara, soon moving
to Artemisa in suburban Havana. Although both parents (Romelia Lopez
and Ignacio “Nacho” Herrera) were pianists, Herrera’s first
love was drums. However, the pull of the piano won out: "I
remember when I was like six years old, my mother asked me if I
wanted to be a piano player, and I said yes, this is the only thing I
want."
"I am very
lucky because my teacher (Jorge Gomez Labrana), he wasn't only my
teacher, he was like a part of my family. He was my father, my
friend, my brother and he was very hard on me. You know, the other
kids were playing and sometimes I didn't want to practice. And he
said in many proper ways that I had to do this because I was doing
something important. You are making your future, this is something
very important in your life and if you don't do this now you will be
lost. You are making your future."
Initially,
Herrera studied the classical composers, immersing himself in the
music of Chopin, Liszt, Brahms, Rachmaninoff, Bach, Mozart, and
Beethoven. Quickly recognized as prodigy, at
the age of 12, he performed Rachmaninoff’s Concerto No. 2 with the
Havana Symphony Orchestra. By this time, however, he was beginning to
feel a connection to traditional Cuban music. When he was 16,
legendary Cuban pianist and Buena Vista Social
Club member Rubén González invited him on stage and
inspired Herrera to study the music of his native culture. In
addition to González, he studied with Cuban master pianists,
Chucho Valdés and Frank Fernández. "All the
important days, you know Christmas, birthdays, I didn't pay any
attention to them. I was always focused on the piano."
Herrera
followed his calling, earning a Master’s Degree in Music from the
Superior Institute of Art in Havana in 1990. He worked in Cuba as
the musical director for both the Havana and Bahamas Tropical
Orchestra shows. In 1996, he served the Cuban
group, Bakuleye, as musical director, producer, and composer,
recording Ula-Ula , and winning the Cuban Nobel Prize of the
Year for Best Orchestra. Then in 1997,
he joined the famed band Cubanismo!, eventually recording two albums
(including Mardis Gras Mambo in New Orleans) and becoming the
musical director, touring Europe, the United States, and the Far
East.
During one of
his American tours, Nachito Herrera attracted the attention of the
jazz community in Minnesota. With the help of Lowell Pickett, the
owner of the Dakota Bar & Grill and founder of the Dakota
Foundation, he was granted a special visa as an “artist
of special merit," allowing him to remain in Minnesota.
In a very short time, he established a large base of fans of jazz and
Latin Music, took on teaching duties at the McPhail College of Music,
and decided to settle in Minnesota. "I liked it [Minneapolis]
immediately because it seemed like one of the more calm, stable, safe
big cities in the U.S.A. And I loved it that even if there are 30
inches of snow on the ground, people will still go out and see live
music.”  Photo by Andrea Canter
And there is no
end to the critical acclaim Herrera receives whenever he plays. Noted
Michael Dumbrow (Urban Pioneer, 2002), “Nachito seems to
treat the piano as the percussion instrument that it really is. 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.” With Bembé en mi Casa now
released nationally, Herrera reinforces the accolades that have
swirled around him since his arrival, proclaiming him, in the words
of critic Tom Surowicz, “hotter than the burning tip of a
contraband Cuban cigar… stronger than a straight shot of Havana
rum….and tastier than a big platter of black beans, rice, sweet
plantains and ropa vieja.”
Bembé on Tour
Bembé is loosely
translated as a party in celebration of Cuba and its Orichas, or
spirits, and both the recording and live performances are high
spirited celebrations. Featured musicians include Raúl
Pineda on drums, Jesús Díaz on lead vocals and
percussion, Adalberto Lara on trumpet, Nardy Castellini on saxophone,
and 15-year-old Mirdalys Herrera on vocals.
Any time Nachito Herrera takes the
stage, the music ignites anything in its path, with “Cuban rhythms
mixed with jazz; a show of spiritual force and musical talent; a
demonstration of the pride within Cuban music….” (liner notes,
Bembé en mi Casa). Those attending upcoming shows in
Milwaukee, Chicago, and back home in Minneapolis surely will be
treated to the gems of his new recording, some old favorites (the
most exquisite “Malaguena” you’ll ever hear), and most likely
some new adventures and a few surprises. 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.
“Explosive.
Crowd pleasing. Rhythmically intense. Romantic. Dynamic.
Jaw-droppingly good." --Tom Surrowicz, Minneapolis Star-Tribune
Gig
information:
- September 17, at Latin Music Fest, Wisconsin State Fair,
Milwaukee (
www.latinmusicfest.org);
- September 18-20, World Music Fest, Chicago:
September 18, Navy Pier,
1 pm;
September 19, live radio feed from Cassidy Theater, Chicago
Cultural Centre, 11 am;
September 19, Hot House, 9 pm (31 E. Balbo
Ave);
September 20, Daly Center, Noon.
September 21-22, at the Dakota
in Minneapolis, 8 pm (1010 Nicollet Mall;
www.dakotacooks.com );
September 21, First Avenue, Minnesota Music Awards,
approximately
11:30 pm. Nachito will also appear with Doc Severinson at Minnesota
Orchestra Hall, November 11-12.
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