Evelio Galan (vocals) Ariel Hernandez (tres, coros) Carlos Talens (guitar, coros) Paul Williamson (trumpet) Andrew Csibi (bass) Conor Guilfoyle (bongoes, cowbell) Frailan Moran(congas) - Stefano Muscovi (trumpet on Nadie se salva de la rumba)
Havana Son is the lastest installment in drummer/percussionist Conor Guilfoyle's fascination with Cuban Music, and this time he's got the chemistry balanced to a tee.
A pleasingly diverse snapshot of Irish multiculturalism at work, Guilfoyle has recruited talented musicians from Cuba, Argentina, Spain and Italy, all of whom have grasped the oportunity of musical life in Ireland, plus the cream of domestic Latin players. They gel perfectly.
Doing exactly what it says on the tin, Havana Son present a rigoursly authentic take on "son", the guitar driven acoustic idiom that is the precursor to the modern salsa sound. Popularized so memorably by the global phenomenon that was BVSC, "son" is the soundtrack to Cuban daily life, as omnipresent on that Caribbean island as jigs and reels are on this one.
At its melodic core is the double act of the indigenous Cuban guitar known as tres, played here by Ariel Hernandez, and the Spanish guitar of Carlos Talens. Andrew Csibi's upright bass, Frailan Moran's Congas, and Guilfoyle's bongos and all important "campana", or cowbell, lend the rhythmic vitality that is the heartbeat of the island's music.
Soaring over the top, the declamatory phrases of Stefano Muscovi's trumpet and the powerful, engagin voice of Habanero Evelio Galan, bringing the enduring music of his native city to his adopted homeland here in Dublin.
Fun to play, great for listening, even better to dance to.