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Argentine composer and pianist Fernando Otero found his voice
as writer, musician and bandleader when, at the urging of
one of his music teachers, he began to incorporate the indigenous
sounds of his native Buenos Aires into his work. He was just
a teenager then, but an exceptionally gifted one, a serious
student of classical music with an ability to master a variety
of instruments from a very young age. Otero had already begun
to experiment with rudimentary home recordings and was eager
to start writing on his own, though he gravitated more to
a jazz idiom than a classical one. Otero liked popular music
too -- often learning as much from the rock and jazz albums
his older sister brought home as from his formal lessons -
but he had given little thought to the gorgeous clamor around
him. As he recalls, a guitar and composition instructor, Marcelo
Braga Saralegui "showed me the possibility of developing something
with the roots of tango, the sound of tango. Not necessarily
tango itself, but the music I heard as a child, the sound
in the streets. I started working with a bandoneon player
and tried my first project, which I called X Tango."
Twenty years have passed since Otero opened his ears to this
wealth of ideas, and ever since he has pursued his vision
of X Tango. On his Nonesuch debut "Pagina de Buenos Aires",
he does evokes a feeling of Buenos Aires - something you can
sense even if you've never been there --through his innovative
use of the bandoneon, the accordion-like instrument at the
heart of all tango. But the world Otero conjures up is really
all his own. Tango is a jumping-off point for an instrumental
sound that boasts the improvisatory thrill of jazz within
a more formal, contemporary classical structure. In his last
CD "Pagina de Buenos Aires", his work is often short, fast-paced
and intense, full of enough dramatic stops and starts to astonish
first-time listeners -- and confound any couple that might
be fooled into thinking this is simply dance music.
As a composer, Otero is both rigorous and playful. His pieces
at times echo the elegant nuevo tango of Astor Piazzola, but
they also harbor a mischievous spirit that suggests Carl Stallings'
ingenious scoring for animated cartoons -- especially on tracks
like "La Vista Gorda" and "De Ahora En Mas," when piano, violin
and bandoneon seem to be chasing each other around a melody.
He counters this uptempo material with romantic interludes
redolent of vintage film scores on tracks like "Asuncion"
and "Calendario." It's no surprise that the always adventurous
Kronos Quartet has commissioned a piece from him, scheduled
to debut this fall.
Fernando Otero showcases the artist performing original material
in a variety of formats: with a quintet of piano, violin,
cello, acoustic bass and bandoneon; a trio of bass, bandoneon
and piano; a duo, featuring long-time collaborator, violinist
Nick Danielson; and on solo piano. The final two tracks are
orchestral works conducted by Otero and featuring a 25-piece
ensemble, plus band-mate Hector Del Curto on bandoneon. Though
the majority of the work is new, a few pieces had previously
appeared on Otero's 2002 quintet session, Plan, released under
the group name Fernando Otero X Tango. Taken together, these
tracks illustrate the breadth, consistency and remarkable
maturity of Otero's vision.
"His music is very expressive, " says violinist Danielson,
a distinguished artist himself, who has performed with the
New York City Ballet Orchestra and played the title role in
the recent Broadway revival of Fiddler on the Roof. "It's
not easy to play. You have to play it with all your emotion."
Otero has clearly focused his ambitions on his compositions,
not the machinations of his career, which he has allowed to
develop somewhat serendipitously. He relocated to New York
City a decade ago, after brief stops in London and Madrid;
Otero admits, however, that he was drawn here by a romance,
not according to some master plan. He lives in a multi-ethnic
Brooklyn neighborhood that has not yet experienced the gentrification
happening merely blocks away. This bohemian refuge, teetering
on the brink of change, more than suits him; it seems to reflect
exactly where he stands as an artist.
While he remained unknown to the world at large, Otero had,
for some years now, been a well-kept secret among jazz and
classical insiders. His Plan CD has circulated among fellow
musicians and attracted them to his recitals. Otero has composed
and performed with several symphonies and chamber groups in
the U.S. and Mexico, and has also written for ballet and theatre
companies. Actress Salma Hayek introduced Quincy Jones to
Otero at a Hollywood party; Jones subsequently arrived unannounced
backstage after Otero performed a two-hour solo piano recital
in Los Angeles, offering advice, encouragement and an open-ended
invitation to do a project with him. ("It was as if Santa
Claus had come backstage," Otero jokes.) He has collaborated
with one-time Bill Evans sideman Eddie Gomez, flautist Dave
Valentin and pianist/film composer Dave Grusin, among others;
he played with Chico O'Farrill's Jazz Orchestra at jazz @Lincoln
Center; and, most recently, he's joined clarinetist Paquito
D'Rivera on stage and in the studio.
"Last year," says D'Rivera, "our trumpeter Diego Urcola called
my attention to Nicholas Danielson and Fernando Otero, whom
he holds in high regard. Intrigued, I attended a recital they
presented in Manhattan. I was so impressed by what I heard
that I invited the violinist to be part of my own concert
at Jazz At Lincoln Center and asked Fernando to record his
wonderful 'Milonga 10' with me on my first self-produced CD,
Funk Tango. Even since, Fernando has become one of my favorite
composers."
Otero was reared in an environment steeped in music and the
arts. His father, an actor, passed away when Otero was a year
old; he was brought up by his mother, Elsa Marval, an internationally
successful opera singer. His parents were first generation
Argentines. His maternal grandparents had emigrated from Spain,
where his grandmother had also been an opera singer; his father's
family had come from the South of France. As Otero recalls,
"Music at home was very natural. We had a piano, and everyone
was singing and playing --my mother, my sister, me. I didn't
even think about being a musician or not. I just was a musician.
And I remember being a musician all my life. I never thought
about doing anything else."
Otero's mother fueled his desire to master new instruments,
absorb new ideas. He was studying piano and singing at age
5; guitar by the time he was 10. He also picked up the drums,
accordion and melodica. Says Otero, "Whatever I requested
from my mother that had a musical aspect - whether it was
a teacher, a show, an instrument or a record - the answer
was always yes." She took him to hear symphonic music at the
Teatro Colon, where she herself had performed, and that piqued
Otero's curiosity about playing with and composing for an
orchestra. Among those who taught him as an adolescent was
Domingo Marafiotti resident conductor of the Symphonic Orchestra
of the Teatro Colon, with whom Otero took master classes in
orchestration and conducting. Otero recalls, "The teachers
were serious - and the price my mother paid for the lessons
were serious too." He admired Igor Stravinsky and, especially,
Bela Bartok, whose music, he points out, also incorporated
folkloric influences. As he explains, "They were representing
their cultures and they were using their language to express
themselves and that was very important to me." The South American
influences he cites were all virtuosos as well as iconoclasts,:
Argentinian legend Piazzola, the Brazilian composer Egberto
Gismonti and Uruguayan multi-instrumentalist Hugo Fattoruso.
Early on, the precocious Otero began to improvise his own
recordings at home: "I liked to go into the bathroom where
I could get a natural reverb sound. I had two cassette recorders
that I used for overdubbing - it was all low quality, of course,
as a result of dubbing and dubbing on two tapes and adding
tracks in the bathroom with a guitar. I'd stay there, making
music -- singing, playing guitar or small drums, whatever
portable instruments I could get in there." As he grew older,
Otero learned how to navigate a real studio and he was often
asked to produce and mix other local artists.
For many years, the young Otero thought he would become a
singer; it was surely part of his musical DNA. He had vocalized
at home when he was a child and later, he would front his
first three bands. But instrumental music proved to be the
most powerful way for Otero to channel everything he'd learned
and wanted to express about his extraordinary upbringing,
about the music that had shaped him, about Buenos Aires. Without
singing a word, he discovered how to tell a story, and it's
one that has clearly just begun.
~ Michael Hill
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