jazz guitar

Ramiro Pinheiro & Rodrigo Balduino: “Moon River”

No matter how much of an “instant classic” it may have been when it first dropped, after a half century of air play, most people feel like they’ve heard certain songs ad nauseam. That is until you hear a fresh take on it. And we’re not just talking about slapping some drums or a new verse on it and calling it a remix. No, we’re talking about someone from a different cultural background who, without ever having been bogged down by it the way we were, is able to breathe new life into tunes that’ve been around for more than half a century.

Enter Ramiro Pinheiro, a singer-guitarist-composer hailing out of São Paulo. Pinheiro calls Barcelona home these days, but as chamas of Brazilian tradition – be it jazz, bossa, or samba – still burn through his fingers and onto pretty much anything he touches, no matter the music’s origin. Case in point: his second collaborative single of the year “Moon River”.

Recorded alongside fellow Paulistano Rodrigo Balduino, this version of “Moon River” isn’t just a ripple off that mid-’60s flood of Western pop renditions in a bossa nova style. No, there’s intimate honesty to the raw recording of this Breakfast at Tiffany’s triumph that channels the delicate acoustic passion of Jobim or Gilberto, string squeaks, breaths, close quarters instrumentation, and all. And even without translating Johnny Mercer’s lyrics into Portuguese, Pinheiro’s accent alone enchants with an exotic charm, gracing this Henry Mancini mainstay with a new set of legs that’ll last another fifty years, at least.

George Benson

Guitarist George Benson recorded his first album at the age of 21 and continues to be a tremendous influence in the guitar world. In this edition of Liner Notes, jazz historian and Rabbi Neil Blumofe discusses the ongoing life and career of George Benson.

Pat Martino

Through his innovative post-bop, fusion and soul jazz, guitarist Pat Martino overcame a memory crisis and focused on the present to rediscover his technique. In this edition of Liner Notes, jazz historian and Rabbi Neil Blumofe recollects Pat Martino, his struggle with amnesia, and how he re-learned his iconic technique.

Wes Montgomery (6.14.15)

Wes Montgomery was born “John Leslie Montgomery” in Indianapolis, Indiana in 1923. From humble beginnings in the Midwest, he went on to become one of the all time leading jazz guitar players, taking after luminaries like Django Reinhardt and Charlie Christian.

In this edition of Liner Notes, Rabbi and jazz historian Neil Blumofe, talks about how the unassuming nature of Montgomery allows us to see that revolution and innovation are all around us each day. In the ordinariness of his playing, Montgomery was dangerous. Threatening to the status quo of, not only the everyday, but the avant-garde as well.