It seems very strange that World Circuit/Nonesuch would wait ten long years to issue this historic document of the grand, wildly celebrated Buena Vista Social Club concert at Carnegie Hall. This is the very show so wonderfully and artfully detailed by filmmaker Wim Wenders in his documentary on the project that reunited these then-obscure Cuban music legends for an album and a tour and catapulted them to worldwide fame. Perhaps it was worth the wait; perhaps this music should have been in our midst all along. Of the four older legends, those who had made music together in Cuba before Castro, only Omara Portuondo remains on the Earth, and she is still quite active. The other three, vocalist Ibrahim Ferrer, pianist Rubén González, and guitarist and vocalist Compay Segundo, have passed away -- Segundo lived to be 96! The youngster of the group, guitarist Eliades Ochoa, continues to record and tour.
One thing the music on this lavishly packaged double-disc set does accomplish, however, is reveal without doubt that the music in the film is as profound, sensual, and beautiful as it was when accompanied by images. It is true that eight of the songs that appeared on the eponymous studio album are replicated here, but these live versions blow them away. In addition, the 16 songs here, covering two full discs, offer extended instrumental workouts to go along with the glorious vocals, making each tune -- from the opening "Chan Chan" all the way through to the glorious bolero "Silencio" duet between Ferrer and Portuondo -- reflect all of the lived history not only of the singers, but of the entire era for an audience to behold. Segundo's rich and lived-in baritone inhabits disc two's opener, "Orgullecida," so fully that no one should ever be allowed to cover it again. As is the standard for Nonesuch, the sound of the evening is fantastic, the spark in the mix has been left in, and the backing band sounds as varied and tight as it did in the film. The enclosed booklet contains Jon Pareles' original New York Times review of the performance and reminiscences from many of those involved in the evening, including Omara Portuondo and producer and backing guitarist Ry Cooder. This set is every bit as necessary as the solo albums by the singers, and perhaps even more than the studio effort. It is not only a historical document; it is a living, breathing piece of work that guarantees the transference of emotion from tape to listener, and cements the Buena Vista Social Club's place not only in the Latin music pantheon, but in the larger context of popular music history. ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide
At Carnegie Hall
10/14/2008 | Nonesuch
All Music Guide Review
At Carnegie Hall Track Listing
At Carnegie Hall Notes
The landmark Buena Vista Social Club concert at Carnegie Hall – July 1, 1998 – was both the start of a remarkable story and
the culmination of a dream. This one-time-only event elevated veteran Cuban performers like Ibrahim Ferrer, Ruben Gonzalez,
Compay Segundo and Omara Portuondo to long-overdue status as international stars, and it transformed the BVSC’s already
critically acclaimed album into a commercial juggernaut. Since then, the Grammy-winning Buena Vista Social Club, recorded
at Havana’s Egrem Studio by guitarist Ry Cooder, has sold over eight million copies, making it the best-selling world music
album ever, and the “Buena Vista Social Club Presents” imprimatur has come to represent an unwavering mark of quality.
The evening also became the dramatic heart of German filmmaker Wim Wenders’ popular, Oscar-nominated documentary,
also called Buena Vista Social Club. This live set, is
the crucial link to everything that happened before or after for Buena Vista Social Club as a group of musicians and as a
brand; it’s the album fans have eagerly awaited for a decade.
The cultural
significance of BVSC’s performance was matched by its political momentousness; this concert offered a rare opportunity for
these master Cuban musicians, coming together for the first time as a single ensemble, to freely play their classic songs for an
American audience. This two-disc set preserves an important, but sadly evanescent, moment when borders and bureaucracies
miraculously disappeared in the name of art.
As album producer and fellow
performer Cooder puts it, “Listening to the tapes of the concert for the first time in ten years, I’m struck by what an amazing
musical event it was. You’ll never hear it again, people of this caliber working together. They were dramatic personalities and
they’re now nearly all gone. There’s nobody left like that any more.”
Credits of At Carnegie Hall
- Geraint Lewis
- Photography
- Eliades Ochoa
- Guitar, Vocals, Author, Musician
- Jon Pareles
- Essay
- Wim Wenders
- Author
- Alberto Valdés
- Maracas, Musician, Vocals (Background)
- Randy Ezratty
- Engineer
- Charlie Gillett
- Author
- Ebet Roberts
- Photography
- Jenny Adlington
- Author
- Martin Pradler
- Mixing
- Susan Titelman
- Photography
- Roberto García
- Bongos, Guiro, Musician, Cowbell
- Benito Suárez Magana
- Guitar, Musician
- Nigel Williamson
- Sleeve Notes
- Compay Segundo
- Guitar, Musician, Vocals
- Ibrahim Ferrer
- Vocals, Musician
- Amadito Valdés
- Timbales, Author, Musician
- Barbarito Torres
- Author, Laoud, Musician
- Manuel "Puntillita" Licea
- Vocals, Musician
- Salvador Repilado
- Bass, Musician
- Hugo Garzón
- Vocals, Musician
- Jo Smith
- Photography, Cover Art
- Donata Wenders
- Photography
- Joshua Douglas Smith
- Mixing Assistant
- Octavio Calderón
- Trumpet, Musician
- John Mark Harris
- Engineer
- Angel Terri Domech
- Conga, Musician, Author
- Pío Leyva
- Vocals, Musician
- Omara Portuondo
- Vocals, Musician, Author
- Jon Bates
- Engineer
- David Bither
- Author
- Jerry Boys
- Engineer, Author
- Joachim Cooder
- Percussion, Musician, Drums
- Nick Gold
- Executive Producer, Author
- Rubén González
- Piano, Musician
- Bernie Grundman
- Mastering
- Orlando "Cachaito" Lopez
- Bass, Musician, Author
- Ry Cooder
- Guitar, Producer, Author, Musician












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