| Whether delivered in the Spanish of her native Chile or the English that has served her well during her years in the UnitedStates, Claudia Acuña creates music resonant with determination and compassion, commitment to struggling for and
 sustaining her hope for a better world. “The majority of musicians who I know or admire want to make a piece of music
 their own,” she says, while also noting that “words are written for a reason, and the images in lyrics are a key to
 motivation.” The images that inspire Acuña, drawn from her own creations as well as classics of Central and South
 America, coalesce in her Marsalis Music debut En Este Momento (At This Moment) and create a program powerful in both
 its message and its musicality.
 The 10 tracks on the disc chart Acuña’s growing commitment to synthesize the heritage of her background and the jazz
 tradition in seamless personal expression. “I’ve always dreamed of being a singer, and when I discovered jazz and the
 greatest jazz singers I could not believe the freedom they could find in every song, a freedom that does not exist in any
 other music. I love jazz’s tradition, but I always promised myself that my music would pay tribute to who I am, which is
 why all of my albums contain at least one song from South America. I still sing standards that have meaning for me; but
 time is a wonderful thing, because as you develop and discover, you gain the confidence to apply your curiosity to both
 the music you grew up with and the music you learned from others. Musicians of my generation have shown how much
 smaller the world has grown in the past 20 years.”
 Acuña applies these insights on En Este Momento in a wide-ranging program that includes several Spanish-language
 classics. “Some of these songs I’ve known since I was little, like “La Mentira,” which was a big hit in the late ‘40s by Lucho
 Gatica, one of the first international crossover artists, or the three songs by Victor Jara, who is like Bob Dylan to many
 Chileans. Others have come to me along the way. A classical musician introduced me to the music of [Uruguayan singer
 and percussionist] Ruben Rada, who wrote “Sueño Contigo,” and I finally got to meet Ruben last year when I was at the
 La Pataya festival.
 All of this music displays an integrity and vision that, in some cases, has cost the composers their lives. Jara, one of the
 leaders of the Nueva Cancion Chilena movement, was murdered in a football stadium after the Pinochet dictatorship
 seized power in 1973; Alberto Carrillo, who pioneered the music of Chile in Mexico and wrote “La Mentira,” also died
 tragically. More recently, Fernando Solanas, the Argentinean director who contributed the lyrics to Astor Piazzolla’s “Vuelvo
 Al Sur,” was the target of an assassination attempt while running for political office. Acuña emphasizes, “I did not choose
 songs to revisit painful personal histories, but to celebrate the lives and commitment of these great musicians through
 their music. I pick songs with stories that I can relate to, and after they have spoken to me I hear things of my own that I
 want to add.”
 Acuña’s growing confidence in her own songwriting can be heard in two original compositions where she contributed the
 melody and lyrics, with additional music supplied by members of her band. “‘Tulum,’ which I wrote with Juancho Herrera, is
 for the city on the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico where I went to become totally disconnected from the everyday world. I
 traveled there by myself and stayed on the beach in a place with no electricity and little more than a bed. The experience
 showed me the magic of life and how the simplest things can have the most meaning. At a time when I was growing
 disenchanted, it allowed me to be enchanted by life again.
 “‘That’s What They Say’ was a collaboration with Jason Lindner, inspired by the early days of the Iraq war and my
 experience as a spokesperson for the children’s organization World Vision Chile. I was horrified by the conditions in which
 so many children live, and to this day cannot understand how those of us who are more fortunate remain in our own
 bubble. Children are not born delinquents, they respond to what society has done to them. These are the feelings I wanted
 to express, and after Jason gave me chords and a groove the melody and lyrics – some in English, some in Spanish –
 came out like a flood of water. The song is a question to God and is both sad and angry, but at heart quite simple.”
 Pianist Lindner and guitarist Herrera, together with bassist Omer Avital and drummer Clarence Penn, form the band that
 has allowed Acuña to realize such personal expression. “Jason has been my piano player, musical director and best friend
 for ten years, my closest collaborator, and Omer and Clarence are musicians who I have also known for years.
  Juancho isanother important musical partner, although we’ve only worked together for two years. It was easy for me to meet all ofthem and for us to create music together on the New York jazz scene, because we share a hunger to develop our own
 voices and to grow. Even as we continue to mature, we retain that hunger and the willingness to explore, and through
 performance we have developed a language.”
 The interaction of these talented artists has created arrangements as pungent and seductive as Acuña’s singing. “I would
 never simply hand a song to an arranger,” she explains. “The song choices are mine, but I believe in teamwork. I’ll begin
 by working closely with Jason or Juancho; but however clear and strong the initial arrangement might be, everyone is free
 to add his or her own ideas at rehearsal. Like any conversation, you are not the only one participating when you create
 music, and it is important to me that I remain free to be led somewhere else. And I’m so lucky to develop music with a
 band where the relationships go beyond the music paper. That’s when you feel like you’re flying.”
 Acuña quickly developed the same feelings toward producer Branford Marsalis, who she met when she participated in the
 recording of Joey Calderazzo’s Marsalis Music album Amanecer. “It was a very different experience for me to work with a
 producer like Branford who is a musician first and has strong opinions about the music and being a bandleader, yet also
 embraces my music so strongly and wants to help shape what I do rather than trying to change me. It has been a
 wonderful process to see his commitment to recording live, his concerns about sound, and his belief in the concept of a band.”
 The meeting of artist and producer could not have come at a more opportune time. “I often tell the story of hearing Dizzy
 Gillespie’s United Nation Orchestra and realizing that, if Dizzy could embrace Afro-Cuban music that strongly, I could do
 the same with jazz. As I’ve learned more about technique, I have tried to remain open to all kinds of music while retaining
 the freedom that is unique to jazz. And I’ve reached the point where I don’t worry about whether I’m singing standards or
 originals, or whether I choose to sing in English or Spanish. It’s the right moment for putting forth what is me. The
 members of my band and I have found each other in one city – in one painting. We are taking the influences that
 surround us without worrying about being as pure as possible. We are learning, then teaching.”
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