Afro-Cuban culture, Cuba, Puerto Rico, Video
More from the wonderful “Conga Borikua” YouTube channel.
Third in a series of what happens when we invest in music education for young people.
Alex Lebron, Manolo Rodriguez, Marcos Lopez
– Ken McCarthy
Jazz on the Tube
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Afro-Cuban culture, Cuba, Video and audio
Centro Habana
August, 2014
More great stuff from the atticchris YouTube channel.
I love the way this guy captures the music.
Sweet and simple.
– Ken McCarthy
Jazz on the Tube
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Go to Cuba with Jazz on the Tube as your guide:
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Cuba, Puerto Rico, Video
Music is not a competition.
On the other hand, fledgling congueros should know what they’re up against.
I don’t have any info about this young player.
The video was posted fourteen years ago on a fascinating YouTube channel called Conga Borkiua.
Is there anything more beautiful than a culture that nurtures its young through music?
Their mission statement:
The purpose of this page is to have a space for Puerto Rican percussionists where they can share their ideas and make contact with other musicians in the world. It is a bond of friendship between all with a common purpose that unites us, EL TAMBOR
One good video deserves another. From the same channel.
David Antonio, 11 years old (posted 2013)
– Ken McCarthy
Jazz on the Tube
P.S. Our unique programming is made possible by help from people like you. Learn how you can contribute to our efforts here: Support Jazz on the Tube
Thanks.
Go to Cuba with Jazz on the Tube as your guide:
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Afro-Cuban culture, Cuba
A tribute to the versatile percussionist
Percussionist Ray Mantilla passed away on March 21, 2020 at the age of 85.
Raymond Mantilla was born in New York City on June 22, 1934.
His childhood friends included percussionist Ray Barretto, pianist Eddie Palmieri, percussionist Manny Oquendo, and flutist Johnny Pacheco.
Mantilla began playing congas and Latin percussion as a youth and was busy working at sessions and making recordings while still quite young.
He gained recognition as a member of Herbie Mann’s Afro-Cuban band during 1959-63, and then became very busy in the jazz and Latin music worlds.
Mantilla appeared on hundreds of recordings in his career including with Ray Barretto, Charles Mingus, Art Blakey, Gato Barbieri, Joe Beck, Walter Bishop Jr, Mose Allison, Kenny Burrell, Richie Cole, Larry Coryell, Joe Farrell, John Hicks, Jack McDuff, Jimmy McGriff, Jeremy Steig, and Cedar Walton.
Mantilla was also a member of Max Roach’s all-percussion group M’Boom where he had the opportunity to display his versatility on a variety of percussion instruments, and he visited Cuba in 1977 as part of Dizzy Gillespie’s historic visit.
A bandleader since 1978, heading a group called the Space Station, he led nine albums and became notable for performing Afro-Cuban jazz in unusual time signatures.
Here is Ray Mantilla leading Space Station in 2012.
– Ken McCarthy
Jazz on the Tube
P.S. Our unique programming is made possible by help from people like you. Learn how you can contribute to our efforts here: Support Jazz on the Tube
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Go to Cuba with Jazz on the Tube as your guide:
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Afro-Cuban culture, Cuba
A tribute to the preserver of New Orleans’ African-American cultural traditions
Ronald Lewis passed away on March 20, 2020 at the age of 68.
Lewis was a participant in New Orleans’ Mardi Gras parades from an early age and loved the culture so much that he became an authority on New Orleans’ parading customs.
When he retired after working for 31 years for the Regional Transit Authority as a streetcar track repairman, he devoted himself fulltime to parade culture.
Lewis’ collection of Mardi Gras costumes, supplies and memorabilia along with his photos (he was a skilled photographer) so overwhelmed his family’s residence that his wife persuaded him to move his collection elsewhere.
In the early 2000s, Ronald Lewis opened his cultural museum, The House of Dance and Feathers, in the Lower Ninth Ward of New Orleans with the original purpose of teaching children about New Orleans’ culture.
Hurricane Katrina caused major damage but he was able to rebuild the museum which became an important cultural landmark; he also wrote a book about his collection and the legacy that it represented.
This film, which was made at the House of Dance and Feathers, features Ronald Lewis talking about New Orleans culture and his collection.
– Ken McCarthy
Jazz on the Tube
P.S. Our unique programming is made possible by help from people like you. Learn how you can contribute to our efforts here: Support Jazz on the Tube
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Go to Cuba with Jazz on the Tube as your guide:
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Afro-Cuban culture, Cuba, Video and audio
There is a simple solution to all life’s problems: More rumba
Roman Diaz, Pedrito Martinez, Mauricio Herrera, Clemente, and Sebastian Nickoll en la casa de
Román.
Was this filmed in Havana Norte (New York City) or Havana proper?
It turns out not to matter!
But if you’re looking for clues, that nifty basketball hoop for kids is unlikely to be in Cuba. If only we could read the labels on those beer bottles, we’d know for sure.
– Ken McCarthy
Jazz on the Tube
P.S. Our unique programming is made possible by help from people like you. Learn how you can contribute to our efforts here: Support Jazz on the Tube
Thanks.
Go to Cuba with Jazz on the Tube as your guide:
Click here for details