Tito Puente Latin Music Series: Free
Concerts in July
BOSTON & JAMAICA PLAIN, MA: From merengue and salsa to
Afro-Cuban and Latin jazz, the fifth-annual Tito Puente Latin Music Series
promises to heat-up two of Boston's neighborhood public parks in July with
danceable rhythms. The series—presented by Berklee College of Music; Villa
Victoria Center for the Arts; and ParkARTS—features Berklee faculty, students,
and guest artists hailing from various parts of Latin America, including the
Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, Venezuela, and Mexico.
The free music series takes place outdoors in two locations in the city on four
Thursday evenings: July 9, 16, 23, and 30. The July 9 concert happens at Mozart
Park, 10 Mozart Street, in Jamaica Plain, accessible by the Jackson Square T
stop on the orange line. The concerts on July 16, 23, and 30 take place at O'Day
Park, next door to Villa Victoria Center for the Arts, 85 West Newton Street, in
Boston's South End.
All concerts are from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. For more information, call 617 927-1717,
email aalvear@iba-etc.org, or visit
http://berklee.edu/events/summer.
The parks are wheelchair accessible.
This year's program:
July 9 - Orquesta Bacharengue at Mozart Park
In collaboration with the Hyde Square Task Force
Orquesta Bacharengue, led by Berklee faculty member Ricardo Monzón, was inspired
by the enthusiasm that grew around the formation of the Berklee Merengue
Ensemble in 2008. Drawing on a wealth of connections between students, faculty,
and Boston area musicians, the group brings talented musicians together to
perform two popular genres developed in the Dominican Republic: bachata and
merengue, hence the name Bacharengue. The energy and dynamism of this
combination will surely get the audience dancing. Joining Orquesta Bacharengue
for this concert will be special guest Henry Jiménez, composer, pianist,
producer, and arranger for Grammy-winner Olga Tañón, and Latin Grammy-winners
Johnny Ventura and Milly Quezada.
July 16 - Javier Arroyo and the Salsa Night Band at O'Day Park
Javier Arroyo, a Cape Cod resident, has deep roots in music. As a boy in Puerto
Rico, his father and uncles would gather in the evenings, bringing their guitars
along with the Puerto Rican cuatro, and sing old boleros, guarachas, rancheras,
and decimas. They would give him nickels and quarters for singing the songs they
especially liked. Arroyo loved the way the sounds intermixed and soon developed
his singing skills in tone with them. He has performed with such artists as
Willie Colón, Luisito Ayala, Puerto Rican Power, and El Gran Combo. Javier
Arroyo and the Salsa Night Band, a 12-piece group featuring some of the best
musicians in the Northeast, debuted at Boston's Puerto Rican Festival in 2002
and just released its first CD.
July 23 - Obbini Tumbao at O'Day Park
Cacao Música recording artists and winners of the 2006 Boston Phoenix poll for
Best World Music Act, Obbini Tumbao delivers high-energy dance music. Rebecca
Cline, a Berklee faculty pianist from Athens, Georgia, joins forces with Anita
Quinto, a percussionist from Caracas, Venezuela, to produce a compelling new
sound for fans of the infectious grooves associated with artists like Buena
Vista Social Club. The band's powerful horn section is supported by an ebullient
rhythm section of congas, timbales, bongos, piano, and bass. In five short
years, Obbini Tumbao has gained the loyal affection of the Boston-area
salsa-music-loving public. The group performs regularly to sold-out audiences at
the Regattabar, Scullers, and Ryles.
July 30 - Victor Mendoza at O'Day Park
Mexico-born vibraphonist and composer Victor Mendoza is considered to be one of
today's finest Latin jazz artists. At this concert he will perform a newly
developed dance music repertoire. Recordings and performances with Mendoza's own
group and with artists such as Paquito D'Rivera, Danilo Pérez, Michel Camilo,
Claudio Roditi, and Antonio Sánchez, have earned him the respect of critics and
fans around the globe. Black Bean Blues, his most recent CD, was named one of
the best Latin jazz albums of the year by Modern Drummer. The Smithsonian
included the album in Latin Jazz: The Perfect Combination, its first major
exhibit about the genre. Mendoza, a Berklee professor with a reputation as a top
educator, regularly conducts master classes around the world. He is releasing an
educational DVD this fall.
Now in its 13th year, ParkARTS began as Mayor Thomas M. Menino's initiative to
present a yearlong program of arts- and culture-related programs and events in
Boston's park system. ParkARTS, the Boston Parks and Recreation Department's
multifaceted arts program, incorporates the visual, performing, and
participatory arts. The 2009 ParkARTS performing arts program, sponsored by Bank
of America, will present concerts in Boston neighborhood parks that range from
jazz to symphonic music.
Villa Victoria Center for the Arts is a non-profit arts and culture center
dedicated to preserving, promoting, and celebrating Latino arts and artists, and
creating cross-cultural collaborations. Villa Victoria Center for the Arts is a
program of Inquilinous Boricuas en Acción, a non-profit organization that since
1968 has been a leader in the Boston community for holistic community
development and programming. Villa Victoria Center for the Arts is located in
the heart of Villa Victoria, on W. Newton Street (between Tremont Street and
Shawmut Avenue).