Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review
(9 customer reviews) 8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
With Jibaro, Miguel Zenon stand at the apex of young jazzers,
June 11, 2005 Jan P. Dennis "Longboard jazzer" (Monument, CO USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Jibaro (Audio CD)
Want to hear The Next Big Thing from young jazz practitioners? Look no farther. Miguel Zenón is it.
He's got it all: monster chops on alto sax; a deeply delved folkloric compositional concept (indeed, he's the Edward Simon of Puerto Rico, with this disc doing for him what La Bikina did for Simon); bandleading acumen far beyond his tender years; and that je ne sais quoi that serendipitously graces fortunate musicians every now and again.
The comparison to Edward Simon seems most apposite to these ears. Just as Simon has been able to evoke the deepest strains of Venezuelan folk musics on his handful of remarkable discs, so Zenón has done with indigenous Puerto Rican musics on this disc. Indeed, some of the numbers sound as if they could be right off of Simon's La Bikina (e.g., "Punto Cubano," and "Alguinaldo," which just goes to show, I suppose, the deep affinity the various Latin musics have with each other). That's fine by me, as La Bikina is...Read more
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful
A Blossoming Star,
September 20, 2005 M. Murphy (birmingham, alabama United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Jibaro (Audio CD)
With his recent release "Jibaro" Miguel Zenon has proven that the kudos that fans and critics have showered him with are right on. Here's why. Jibaro which means a certain Puerto Rico "folk music" is a showcase for Zenon's amazing composition skills[he wrote all the tunes] and his uniquely non-latin way of playing a "type" of latin jazz. While it's tough to categorize "Jibaro" I think it's really interesting that a Puerto Rican band leader,with several latin players,play distinctly non-latin sounding tunes on a cd devoted to the leaders homeland. There are no traditional latin instruments[congas,timbales,etc.]and in fact the band consists of a traditional jazz quartet.AND IT WORKS BEAUTIFULLY! Zenon's compositions snake with stops and starts. The jagged lines of his tunes are mostly interesting without cliche. The two tunes that stand out are "Chorreao" and the title tune "Jibaro". Again don't be fooled by the spanish sounding titles this is not your daddy's latin jazz[which I...Read more
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Simply BRILLIANT!,
September 24, 2005 YMS (San Juan, PR) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Jibaro (Audio CD)
The most amazing aspect of this CD, is the spectacular ensemble. We already know that Zenon is a great Sax player, but the way he composed for every instrument is truly amazing. It's not just about his Sax; the piano(I love what he does!), the bass and the drums have their integral part and is a matter of making music as a group... great music! Even though you know the "jibaro" music or not, this is a CD you'll love; it's creative and refreshing, as well as musically interesting.