Arte y Vida, Artist Feature >>
Doc Severinsen + El Ritmo de La Vida + Sones de México
Doc Severinsen, virtuoso trumpeter, is best known as the “Tonight Show” bandleader from 1967 to 1992. In 2006, he retired to San Miquel de Allende, Mexico, and found “the rhythm of life” with local musicians playing in the area. Soon, the 81-year old trumpeter had crafted his innovative El Ritmo de la Vida project which is now touring the United States. The sizzling Latin rhythms mix in Argentine tango, Spanish flamenco, and gypsy jazz for an eclectic and entertaining performance. Severinsen is joined on stage by violinist Pedro Cartas, guitarist Gil Gutierrez, bassist Gilberto Gonzalez, and percussionist Miguel Favero.
The evening begins with Sones de México, an ensemble dedicated to Mexican folkloric music including huapango, gustos, chilenas, son jarocho, and more. The group formed in 1994 to keep the tradition of Mexican ‘son’ music alive in its many regional forms. Through the years, the ensemble has amassed a large collection of folk musical instruments representative ofMexico’s diverse local cultures and a team of multi-instrumentalist musicians. Their diverse repertoire, rich in colors, textures and rhythms demonstrates that there is more to Mexican music than mariachi. Today, the ensemble has toured extensively, developing and popularizing many original arrangements of Mexican traditional tunes, as well as experimenting cross-culturally with symphonic, Irish, folk, country, jazz, and rock music. Musicians in the group include music director Victor Pichardo, producder Juan Dies, Zacbé Pichardo, Lorena Iñiguez, Javier Saume-Mazzei, and Juan Rivera.
As part of Sones de México’s nonprofit mission for musical education, the members will give a free lecture and demonstration of Mexican folk music at 12 noon, also on June 24, in the Claudia Cassidy Theater of the Chicago Cultural Center.
Thursday, June 24
6:30PM
Music Without Borders
Millennium Park
Admission is FREE
06/14/10 >> go there