Sentimiento Latino

Sentimiento Latino

Sentimiento Latino
List Price: $15.99
Our Price: $9.49
You Save: $6.50 (41%)
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Buy Used: from $9.02 (click here)
Category: Music CD
See more new music releases
Listen soundtracks from this album



(Click here)
Buy this Music CD at online store in your country
Canadian Music Store

Music CD Cover

Performer: Juan Diego Florez
Edition: Music CD
CD Release Date: 2006-03-14
Soundtracks:
  1. Alma Llanera
  2. Ella
  3. La Flor de la Canela
  4. El D?a Que Me Quieras
  5. Granada
  6. La Jarra de Oro
  7. Princesita
  8. J?rame
  9. Estrellita
  10. Fina Estampa
  11. En Mi Viejo San Juan
  12. Siboney
  13. Aquellos Ojos Verdes
  14. Bello Durmiente
  15. M?jico Lindo (y Querido)

Free Music Notes for Sentimiento Latino

Free Music Review: Fresh approach to LatinAmerican music without operatic affectation
Hit: 4 Stars

When I learnt about this CD I could not avoid to think of those infamous Placido Domingo's recordings singing tangos and boleros with a melodramatic tenor voice. However Juan Diego Florez's CD is a fresh approach to LatinAmerican music with the beauty of his young voice but without a trace of operatic affectation (in spite of the fact that he is a great opera singer).
I have to admit that I did not particularly liked the orchestral arrangements nor the idea behind great tenors singing popular music. However it is important to remember that JDF first approach to the art of singing was in his mother's live music pub in Lima. Once in a while he used to work as a replacement singer in the pub and, as he recalled about those days: "It was a tremendous experience for me, since most of those who were regulars at the pub were of a certain age, so I had to be ready to sing anything from huaynos to Elvis Presley music and, in my mind, that served me a great deal because, in the final analysis, any music that is well structured - whether it is jazz, opera, or pop - is good music".
Being a Venezuelan myself I felt a bit upset with the modern approach to Alma Llanera which is the main aria from a "zarzuela" composed in the mid fourties that became Venezuelan second anthem. However he sings it in an impecable way. I liked him in "El dia que me quieras". He is not Gardel though but, thanks God, he is not Placido Domingo either (PD also sings this song in his late 70's tango recording).

Finally I would like to say few words about the comments of this Nicolas guy from Argentina. It is obvious he did not like the CD but I wonder why he has to use insults like "imbecil" , "clown" and "idiot" refering to this great peruvian singer? I do not paid any respect to such comments but I think that Amazon should have a "report abuse" policy for these situations. I just wonder if Mr. Nicolas has listened JDF singing Donizetti or Rossini's operas? Nobody who has had the pleasure of listening this young tenor singing coloratura arias would have the nerve of referring to him in the terms this guy from Argentina does.

Sentimiento Latino Poster

Juan Diego Florez was brought up with the sounds of Latin-American music. His father, Ruben, was a singer of popular Peruvian songs-- particularly those by Chabuca Granda, for which the boy developed an early affection. His mother, Maria Teresa, who is a great marinera dancer, taught him to appreciate "criollo" Peruvian music, whilst his beloved grandmother, Ena Rosa, opened his ears to the tangos of Gardel and others, which she used to play on her old piano.

At first Juan Diego followed in his father's footsteps. By the time he was fourteen, he was singing, playing the guitar and composing his own canciones, which he performed alongside Peruvian and Latin-American songs in the piano bars of the bohemian Barranco district of Lima. It was not until he was seventeen that Florez began studying classical music and opera in earnest. In a way, then, this recital of Spanish and Latin American songs is a musical homecoming. It's more than a mere exercise in nostalgia, however, as these songs have a place in Latin culture equivalent to those of Irving Berlin, George Gershwin, Cole Porter and other contributors to the so-called "Great American Songbook" in the United States. One could argue, too, that many of the songs here have roots that run close to an operatic source--closer, in fact, than their gringo counterparts.

Listening to, say, "Princesita" or "Estrellita," one notices a kinship with the slightly older repertory of Neapolitan songs such as "'O sole mio" or "Torna a Surriento," favourites of Italian (and Italianate) tenors since Caruso's day. Both types are sweetly, lyrically sentimental with elegantly arching melodies that offer ample opportunity for vocal display. Not surprisingly, then, many of these Latin songs were embraced by opera singers. Spanish-speaking musicians were drawn to them for obvious reasons. Mexican tenor Jose Mojica recorded "Princesita" in 1925, for example. "Princesita" was also recorded the following year by Tito Schipa, the legendary Italian lyric tenor, who was a favourite in Spain and shrewdly tailored his programmes to please his local followers.

Tracing the recorded history of this repertory charts its growing popularity and gives an impression of how its range expanded over the years. Some songs were real pop hits, like Agustin Lara's "Granada," a song that has attracted an exceptionally wide array of star talent, including recorded versions by Mario Lanza, Renata Tebaldi, Franco Corelli and Fritz Wunderlich. Of course the popularity of this genre is connected with the fact that in recent years the majority of our leading Italianate tenors have come not from Italy but from Spain and Latin America. Alfredo Kraus, Placido Domingo and Jose Carreras (all three Spanish-born) have included popular songs in their recitals and recordings, and Carreras and Domingo have delved with true seriousness into certain corners of this repertory.

In cultivating, singing and recording Peruvian and other Latin-American songs, Juan Diego Florez is continuing the tradition of Peruvian tenors Alejandro Granda, Luigi Alva and Ernesto Palacio. He grounds his programme with three, time-honored hits. The oldest of these is "Estrellita" by Manuel Marma Ponce (1882-1948). Born in Mexico, Ponce studied in Europe and then directed the Mexico City Conservatory. In his later years he became friends with guitarist Andres Segovia, for whom he composed several works. "Estrellita" was written in 1914 in Mexico City. "Princesita" by Spanish composer Jose Padilla (1889-1960) was originally a number in the 1916 zarzuela (more or less the Spanish equivalent of operetta) entitled La corte del amor; the song was published separately the following year.

Another "antique" on this recital is "Alma llanera" by Pedro Elias Gutierrez (1870-1954) of Venezuela. Like "Princesita," "Alma llanera" was written for a zarzuela, first performed in Caracas in 1914, before taking on a life of its own. (The Italian baritone Apollo Granforte recorded it in 1925.)

The Argentine tango is another popular song form influenced by Italian opera -- not surprisingly, since Argentina was a magnet for Italian immigrants in the late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century. Carlos Gardel (1890-1935), though he was born in France and emigrated to Argentina at the age of seven, idolized Caruso, whom he met in 1915. Gardel recorded his first tango in 1917 following years working the streets and bordellos of Buenos Aires as a folk singer. By 1928, when he made his Parisian debut, the Argentine tango was all the rage on both sides of the Atlantic. "El dia que me quieras" was written in 1935, the same year Gardel was killed in an air crash.

While Gardel was touring the world bringing the tango respectability, Cuban pianist-composer Ernesto Lecuona (1895-1963) was at the height of his powers, writing songs and piano solos that bridged the gap between classical and popular music. A student of Maurice Ravel, Lecuona founded the Havana Symphony and also directed an immensely popular dance band known as Lecuona's Cuban Boys. "Siboney" was composed in 1929. Lecuona remains one of Cuba's most beloved musical figures. Noel Estrada (1918-79) maintains a similar position in Puerto Rico. During World War II, he joined the US Armed Forces, and it was this long, difficult separation from his homeland that inspired his most famous song "En mi viejo San Juan."

Mexico was especially fertile ground for the bolero (a type of lyrical, Latin love song, like Lecuona's "Aquellos ojos verdes"). Agustin Lara (1900-70) helped to build the foundation, and essentially became king, of the Mexican equivalent of Tin Pan Alley. He wrote most of his hit songs in the 1930s, including "Granada," before embarking on a successful career writing film scores. Jesus Monge Ramirez (1910-64), better known as Chucho Monge, and Jose Alfredo Jimenez (1926-73), followed suit, and each wrote hundreds of songs for Mexican films. "Mexico lindo" was the product of Monge's heyday in the early 1940s; Jimenez's "Ella" appeared a full decade later.

Maria Grever (1884-1951), one of two women composers featured on this recital, was a much earlier star of Mexican music. Born in Guanajuato, she studied in Europe with Claude Debussy and Franz Lehar (of Merry Widow fame) and eventually found her way to New York. "Jurame," composed in the mid-1920s, was her first real success, though she would go on to compose over 800 other ballads, including "Te quiero dijiste" (another favourite of operatic stars). And this being a programme by a Peruvian singer, there must be Peruvian songs. In addition to the folksong "La jarra de oro," there are three selections by Maria Isabel Granda Larco (1920-83): "La flor de la canela," "Fina estampa" and "Bello durmiente." Chabuca Granda, as she preferred to be known, grew up singing Mexican boleros and became a leading Latina singer-songwriter. Her own compositions infuse the traditional bolero with elements of native Creole (or Afro-Peruvian) folksong, resulting in especially graceful melodies and strong dance rhythms. Ruben Florez was a celebrated interpreter of Granda's music, so one could say that there are two traditions coming together in Juan Diego's performances here: the relatively recent practice of opera singers singing popular songs, and the more ancient one of songs being passed lovingly and respectfully from one generation to the next.

Classical Music CDs

Music Genres
Top music charts in Opera and Vocal
Mozart - Le nozze di Figaro / Gens ? Ciofi ? Kirchschlager ? Regazzo ? Keenlyside ? McLaughlin ? van Rensburg ? Abete ? Rial ? Concerto K?ln ? Ren? Jacobs ImageMozart - Le nozze di Figaro / Gens ? Ciofi ? Kirchschlager ? Regazzo ? Keenlyside ? McLaughlin ? van Rensburg ? Abete ? Rial ? Concerto K?ln ? Ren? Jacobs
Release date: 2004-05-11; Music CD
Best price: $31.58
Price in other shops: $45.98
Perspectives ImagePerspectives
Release date: 2006-02-07; Music CD
Best price: $4.53
Price in other shops: $11.98
Rolando Villazon: Opera Recital ImageRolando Villazon: Opera Recital
Release date: 2006-02-07; Music CD
Best price: $11.29
Price in other shops: $17.98
Diva!: A Soprano at the Movies ImageDiva!: A Soprano at the Movies
Release date: 2005-06-07; Music CD
Best price: $7.82
Price in other shops: $12.98
The East Village Opera Company ImageThe East Village Opera Company
Release date: 2005-09-27; Music CD
Best price: $4.99
Price in other shops: $12.98
Sacred Songs ImageSacred Songs
Release date: 2005-09-27; Music CD
Best price: $7.90
Price in other shops: $17.98
Sentimiento Latino ImageSentimiento Latino
Release date: 2006-03-14; Music CD
Best price: $12.69
Price in other shops: $15.99
Andrea Bocelli - Amore ImageAndrea Bocelli - Andrea Bocelli - Amore
Release date: 2006-01-31; Music CD
Best price: $5.54
Price in other shops: $18.98
Osvaldo Golijov: Ayre ImageOsvaldo Golijov: Ayre
Release date: 2005-09-27; Music CD
Best price: $8.95
Price in other shops: $16.98
Stella Maris ImageStella Maris
Release date: 2005-10-10; Music CD
Best price: $12.59
Price in other shops: $17.98
Top Rated Albums
Romantic Arias ImageJonas Kaufmann - Romantic Arias
Release date: 2008-03-11; Music CD
Best price: $9.99
Price in other shops: $16.98
The Tenor ImageThe Tenor
Release date: 2007-01-29; Music CD
Best price: $23.21
Price in other shops: $31.99
Rossini - Il Barbiere Di Siviglia (The Barber of Seville) ImageRossini - Il Barbiere Di Siviglia (The Barber of Seville)
Release date: 2005-11-15; DVD
Best price: $18.43
Price in other shops: $39.98
Russian Album ImageRussian Album
Release date: 2007-01-09; Music CD
Best price: $8.94
Price in other shops: $16.98
Donizetti - La Fille du R?giment ImageDonizetti - La Fille du R?giment
Release date: 2006-10-10; DVD
Best price: $18.43
Price in other shops: $29.98
Gitano ImageRolando Villazon & Placido Domingo - Gitano
Release date: 2007-02-06; Music CD
Best price: $9.99
Price in other shops: $17.98
Voce D'Italia: Arias For Rubini ImageVoce D'Italia: Arias For Rubini
Release date: 2008-01-22; Music CD
Best price: $9.46
Price in other shops: $16.98
Una Furtiva Lagrima ImageUna Furtiva Lagrima
Release date: 2003-04-08; Music CD
Best price: $9.83
Price in other shops: $16.98
Juan Diego Florez ~ Rossini Arias ImageJuan Diego Florez ~ Rossini Arias
Release date: 2002-01-08; Music CD
Best price: $9.91
Price in other shops: $16.98
Great Tenor Arias ImageGreat Tenor Arias
Release date: 2004-09-14; Music CD
Best price: $9.36
Price in other shops: $16.98
Compare prices and find music notes for more than one million Music CD titles