This powerful concert was recorded live in New York City on September 
6, 1987. Piazzolla was playing with his best ensemble: a quintet 
consisting of himself on bandoneon, Pablo Ziegler on piano, Fernando 
Suarez Paz on violin, Horacio Malvicino on electric guitar, and Hector 
Console on bass. Piazzolla plays some of his finest material -- about 
half of Tango: Zero Hour surfaces, for example. Two of the most 
paradigmatic Piazzolla pieces show up too: "La Camorra," with its 
alternating moments of tense dance rhythms and creepy atmosphere, and 
"Verano Porteño," with its dancing-bear rhythms. The concert closes with
 "Concierto Para Quinteto," one of those long pieces that Piazzolla 
favored that visits many styles and moods -- almost many eras. It would 
be very easy to lose the thread on such an epic composition in live 
performance, but the quintet keeps it together admirably. The live 
recording is of surprisingly high quality; there is an appropriate echo 
and the balance is nearly perfect. The audience is completely 
unobtrusive -- inaudible except when they applaud. And the instruments 
are very clear, especially when the musicians coax those "zings" and 
"pops" out of them that Piazzolla loved. For someone new to his work, 
the "special effects" on this recording can be a revelation. There is 
also a wonderful spoken track, with Piazzolla talking about himself, the
 tango, and the mysterious bandoneon. This album is a wonderful place to
 start -- or finish -- with this charismatic composer of nuevo tango 
music. Kurt Keefner 
Tracklist
1	Verano Porteño	6:54
2	Lunfardo	5:56
3	Milonga Del Angel	6:32
4	Muerte Del Angel	3:20
5	Astor's Speech	2:20
6	La Camorra	4:27
7	Mumuki	9:09
8	Adios Nonino	8:12
9	Contra Bajissmo	10:10
10	Michelangelo	3:24
11	Concierto Para Quinteto	9:45
Credits
Bandoneon – Astor Piazzolla
Bass – Hector Console
Electric Guitar – Horacio Malvicino
 Piano – Pablo Ziegler
Violin – Fernando Suarez Paz 
14.3.24
ASTOR PIAZZOLLA — The Central Park Concert (1987) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless
1.3.24
ASTOR PIZZOLLA | GARY BURTON - The New Tango (1987) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless
Recorded at the Montreux Festival of 1986, The New Tango is an album of 
collaboration between the undisputed leader of the nuevo tango movement,
 Astor Piazzolla, and American vibe master Gary Burton. All of the 
pieces on the album were written by Piazzolla over the course of some 40
 years of work, along with one special composition, "Vibraphonissimo," 
written expressly for Burton's usage. Surprisingly enough -- given the 
virtuosity and coherence that one receives on the album -- there were a 
mere three rehearsals prior to the recorded performance. As the listener
 finds out, the vibraphone is perfectly suited to the tango; or at the 
very least, that Gary Burton is fully capable of the job. As with all of
 Piazzolla's albums, the chances of disappointment are quite slim, with a
 special amount of attention given here to details by all musicians 
involved. Any fan of the nuevo tango or Piazzolla will be pleased as 
usual. Fans of Gary Burton or jazz vibes may find the album surprisingly
 good as it shows the versatility of the vibraphonist. As Fernando 
Gonzalez once said, "this music knows many dialects. And listens. There 
are no lines drawn and no sides to defend. This is new tango."  Adam Greenberg  
+ last month
JOHANN WILHELM HÄSSLER — Keyboard Sonatas (Michele Benuzzi) 4CD (2016) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless
As Michele Benuzzi himself explains in a booklet-essay, the idea for this comprehensive collection came about through the success of his sma...
 

 
 


 
 
.jpg) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
