Samba Jazz Alley, by Berti Barbera – Romania Musical (Romania)

Translation:
Brazil received jazz even before the bossa-nova, through the musicians who formed and maintained their own community, through the American vein, more or less influenced by the local flavor, but with their own approach, intuitive and warm, distinguished in rigor. gender specific. Brazilian jazz musicians form a separate category, and pianist and composer Antonio Adolfo is a relevant example, with a discography of over 30 albums and a repertoire comparable to an entire history of American, North and South music alike.
With this album, Antonio Adolfo, a prominent exponent of the beginning period of the bossa-nova phenomenon, returns to the musical roots of his hometown, Rio de Janeiro, as a genuine "carioca". The story says that in 1958-1965, a small street in the area of ​​Copacabana took the name of Beco das Garrafas, the street of sitclelor, due to the residents of the taller buildings that threw bottles in protest against the roar of the inhabitants on the ground floor, where young musicians unleashed samba, bossa nova and jazz of those days. An ideal place for artists to meet, where teenager Antonio Adolfo has fostered his enthusiasm for what is meant by samba-jazz, the kind that a whole career will develop.
"Samba Jazz Alley" is now his street, his former music school, now complete on a superb album that unites the Americas with powerful and tastefully combined music.
Berti Barbera