Latest posts
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Diana Krall: The Voice of Sophistication and the Jazz Piano Heritage

Diana Krall is not just one of the most successful artists in jazz history; she is the guardian of an elegance that seems to hail from another era, yet resonates perfectly in the present. Born in Nanaimo, Canada, into a musical family, Diana grew up surrounded by 78-rpm records and the sound of her father’s…
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Forró in the Dark: The Sertão Meets Downtown New York

Forró in the Dark is much more than just a band of Brazilians living abroad; it is a sonic laboratory that proved it is possible to translate the DNA of the sertão to the pavement of Manhattan. It all began in 2002 at Nublu, an East Village club known as a haven for the New…
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Ella Fitzgerald: The Empress of Scat and the Gold Standard of Jazz

Ella Fitzgerald, affectionately known as ‘The First Lady of Song,’ is the embodiment of technical perfection paired with interpretative joy. Her story began with a challenge on the Apollo Theater stage in 1934, where, at age 17, she chose to sing instead of dance. From that moment, the world was introduced to a voice with…
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Yo-Yo Ma: The Global Virtuoso and the Dialogue Between Worlds

Yo-Yo Ma is a singular figure in the history of contemporary music. More than a cellist with impeccable technique, he is a cultural ambassador who believes in music as a tool for universal communication. Born in Paris to Chinese musicians and raised in the United States, Ma was a precocious prodigy—studying Bach at age four…
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João Gilberto: The Architect of Silence and the Beat

João Gilberto was the silent genius who orchestrated one of the most profound aesthetic transformations in 20th-century music. A native of Juazeiro, Bahia, he spent years in almost mystical isolation to decipher how to condense the rhythmic grandeur of samba schools into the six strings of an acoustic guitar. The result was the ‘batida’—a precise…
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Dizzy Gillespie: The Architect of Bebop and Latin Jazz

With his iconic puffed cheeks and his signature upturned trumpet, Dizzy Gillespie was much more than a virtuoso; he was the great intellectual and the master communicator of modern jazz. Alongside Charlie Parker, Gillespie was the primary architect of Bebop in the 1940s, introducing a harmonic and rhythmic complexity that transformed jazz from dance music…
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Kenny Barron: The Supreme Elegance of Jazz Piano

With a career spanning over six decades, Kenny Barron stands as the definition of sophistication in contemporary jazz. Born in Philadelphia, he emerged onto the New York scene in the 1960s, performing with the legendary Dizzy Gillespie. Barron is a master at merging bebop virtuosity with a lyrical melodic sensibility, making him one of the…
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Bitches Brew: Miles Davis’ Electric Revolution

If there is a definitive turning point in the history of modern music, it is Bitches Brew (1970). After flirting with electricity in In a Silent Way, Miles Davis fully submerged himself into uncharted territory. He abandoned traditional jazz structures and assembled a ‘superband’ for recording sessions that felt like rituals of collective improvisation. The…
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Claudio Roditi: Impressions

The album Impressions was recorded on a Sunday afternoon during the Rio summer of 2006. Roditi was on vacation in Brazil and couldn’t resist gathering his friends in a studio to record the themes they frequently played during their sessions at Modern Sound. Modern Sound was a record store in Copacabana that Claudio Roditi considered…
