ROBERTO FONSECA
Jazz pianist - Composer
Music
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Tierra en mano
ROBERTO FONSECA
322
Zamazamazu
ROBERTO FONSECA
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El niejo
ROBERTO FONSECA
411
Roberto Fonseca, one of the most brilliant young jazz musicians to come out of Cuba, was surrounded by music and musicians from birth. His father, Roberto Fonseca Senior, had been a drummer. His mother, Mercedes Cortes Alfaro, is a singer who was once a dancer in Havana’s Tropicana Club, and she sings on her son’s most recent solo album, Zamazu (2007). She was previously married to the legendary jazz pianist Chucho Valdés. Fonseca’s two older half-brothers are the drummer Emilio Valdés and the pianist Jesús “Chuchito” Valdés Jr.
“When I was younger I was a really bad student,” Fonseca admits, somewhat unconvincingly (Fonseca holds a master’s degree in composition from Cuba’s prestigious Instituto Superior de Arte and he has been a music professor). “I didn’t do my homework, my parents always had to be pushing me, until the day when I realised music was really my thing. Then I got more serious – not completely serious, but a bit more serious about music.”
He started out playing drums when he was four years old. He played his first professional gig with a Beatles cover band (he was Ringo). He switched to piano and stuck with it, astonishing crowds with his virtuosity at Havana’s “Jazz Plaza” Festival in 1991. He was 15 years old. His first album, En El Comienzo, which he recorded with Javier Zalba and the group Temperamento, was named Cuba’s Best Jazz Album in 1999. He followed up with two solo records (Tiene Que Ver and Elengo), and then, in 2001, he went to Japan to record No Limit: Afro Cuban Jazz, which has gone on to become a cult classic. His following has been getting a lot bigger with Zamazu, his latest offering. In the words of one reviewer, “Zamazu is a deftly varied and well-sequenced set that leaves a strong impression of who Fonseca is and promises plenty for the future.”
“When I was younger I was a really bad student,” Fonseca admits, somewhat unconvincingly (Fonseca holds a master’s degree in composition from Cuba’s prestigious Instituto Superior de Arte and he has been a music professor). “I didn’t do my homework, my parents always had to be pushing me, until the day when I realised music was really my thing. Then I got more serious – not completely serious, but a bit more serious about music.”
He started out playing drums when he was four years old. He played his first professional gig with a Beatles cover band (he was Ringo). He switched to piano and stuck with it, astonishing crowds with his virtuosity at Havana’s “Jazz Plaza” Festival in 1991. He was 15 years old. His first album, En El Comienzo, which he recorded with Javier Zalba and the group Temperamento, was named Cuba’s Best Jazz Album in 1999. He followed up with two solo records (Tiene Que Ver and Elengo), and then, in 2001, he went to Japan to record No Limit: Afro Cuban Jazz, which has gone on to become a cult classic. His following has been getting a lot bigger with Zamazu, his latest offering. In the words of one reviewer, “Zamazu is a deftly varied and well-sequenced set that leaves a strong impression of who Fonseca is and promises plenty for the future.”
Fonseca made his first international appearances in 2001, touring with the Buena Vista group as a backup pianist for the great Rubén González. When González died in 2003, Fonseca took over for him as accompanist for Ibrahim Ferrer, Cuba’s greatest living bolero singer and another Buena Vista star. Fonseca played on what would become Ferrer’s last tour, and he co-produced Ferrer’s “Mi sueño,” a collection of traditional boleros released after Ferrer’s death in 2005.
Fonseca’s work with González and Ferrer was undeniably important to him and his career. It allowed him to share the stage with other Cuban music legends such as Cachaíto López, Guajiro Mirabal and Manuel Galbán, and he played more than 400 concert dates with them around the world. Still, to call Roberto Fonseca a traditionalist is to miss the point. Sure, you hear elements of Cuban son in his playing – which is usually labelled as jazz – but you can also hear plenty of Afro-Cuban soul and funk. And he rocks the house.
Fonseca’s work with González and Ferrer was undeniably important to him and his career. It allowed him to share the stage with other Cuban music legends such as Cachaíto López, Guajiro Mirabal and Manuel Galbán, and he played more than 400 concert dates with them around the world. Still, to call Roberto Fonseca a traditionalist is to miss the point. Sure, you hear elements of Cuban son in his playing – which is usually labelled as jazz – but you can also hear plenty of Afro-Cuban soul and funk. And he rocks the house.
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