Ray Barretto's
Taboo features a new, smaller version of his
New World Spirit ensemble.
Hector Martignon, who composes along with
Barretto, is still here, as are
Satoshi Takeishi,
Ray Vega, and
Jairo Moreno. Saxophonist
Adam Kolker takes the sax chair vacated by
Jay Rodriguez, and guitarist
Alfredo Gonzales has not been replaced. The material is far jazzier on
Taboo.
Barretto explored the roots of Latin jazz as it transformed itself into the New York version of son and salsa on 2003's
Hot Hands: Ancestral Messages, and
Taboo serves as a guidebook to present and future tenses of Latin jazz. For starters, one can read between the lines that
Ray Vega's charts have moved far a-field of the standard notions surrounding big band arrangements. Everything here feels fluid and relaxed; the playing leaves spontaneity in the air whether it is on a
Barretto or a
Martignon original, such as on "Bomba-Riquen," "99 MacDougal St," or something from the hard bop cannon by
Nat Adderley and
Oscar Brown, Jr., such as the classic "Work Song," or a modal tune like
McCoy Tyner's "Effendi." What comes out is a steamy, emotionally moving, reworking of the soul-jazz ethic by Latin rhythmic and sophistication standards. One tune seamlessly moves into another and the trajectory of soloists against the rhythm section is linear; there is no attempt made by anyone here to play beyond the watermark the band sets, thereby keeping the entire process organic and unified. The counterpoint is engaging, the melodic intervention is groundbreaking, and the interplay of rhythm instruments -- hand percussion, drums, bass, and piano, is nothing less than brilliant and innovative.
Taboo actually moves past
Hot Hands: Ancestral Messages, and gives listeners a solid view of the shape of Latin jazz to come. ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide