Book Review:
Letters to Yeyito: Lessons from a Life in
Music
by Eugene Marlow, Ph.D.
Go to www.eugenemarlow.com/category/blog to read more from Eugene
Letters
to Yeyito (Restless Books, Brooklyn, NY, 228 pages, softcover, 2015)
by world renowned reed player Paquito d’Rivera has the sub-title “Lessons from
a Life in Music.” Fact is the book is much more than that.
It
is more than a litany of lessons from a life in music for one major reason:
Paquito d’Rivera. If this book had been written by less than an accomplished jazz/classical
musician than Maestro d’Rivera, it would have less meaning. Fact is Cuban-born
clarinetist and saxophonist d’Rivera is celebrated for his artistry in Latin
jazz and achievements in classical composition. He has received 14 Grammys, the
National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Master Award, and the National Medal of
the Arts. He is the only artist to have
won Grammys in both classical and Latin jazz categories.
But
it is not this wall of awards that gives Letters to Yeyito its literary
heft. Not only does the author offer a highly descriptive account of life in
Cuba under Fidel Castro, he also provides a detailed account of the many people
who have crossed his musical path and the family and friends who have surrounded
him. More than the lessons, the page after page mention of people in his career
is what gives the book its life.
The
list of musical mentors and colleagues is lengthy. And it is not just
name-dropping. Many are familiar in their own right; many others are less well
known, but nonetheless important to his evolving career.
Here’s
a partial list: “Charanguero” flutist Jose Fajardo, pianist Rafael Somavilla,
guitarist Carlos Emilio, trumpeter Arturo Sandoval, bassist Carlitos Puerto,
trap drummer Enrique Pla, trumpeter John Birks “Dizzy” Gillespie, pianist Mike
Longo, composer Lalo Schifrin, the twins Placido and Domingo Calzadilla, Stan
Getz, Earl Hines, David Amram, Mario Bauza (an old friend of Paquito’s father),
alto clarinetist Rudy Rutherford, bassist Ron McClure, drummer Billy Hart, Ray
Mantilla, John Ore, Mickey Rocker, Ben Brown, pianist Joanne Brackeen, Rodney
Jones, Bruce Lundval, jazz event entrepreneur George Wein, pianists Bill Evans
and McCoy Tyner, bassist Israel Cachao, local guitarist Carlo Emilio,
saxophonist Phil Woods, saxophonist and flautist Frank Wess, soprano Martina
Arroyo, trumpeter Claudio Roditi, bass guitarist Lincoln Goines, drummer Portinho,
pianist Michael Camilo, trombonist Conrad Herwig, Argentinian saxophonist Oscar
Feldman, and cellist Yo Yo Ma. Again, this is a partial list.
There’s
also Uncle Ernesto, Jesus Canon the grocer, and old lady Cheché, among many other
family members, friends, peers, and Castro-ites from his native Cuba.
If
there’s a life lesson in this book it is that talent and high musical
accomplishment attracts like talent and accomplishment.
Paquito
d’Rivera’s Letters to Yeyito: Lessons
from a Life in Music offers the reader a first- hand account of life in
Castro’s Cuba from a musician’s perspective. But more than this, it underlines
the importance of family, friends, mentors, and peers in the development of a
musical career.
EM
September 16,
2016 Eugene Marlow, Ph.D., MBA, is a composer/arranger, producer, presenter, performer, author/journalist, and educator. He has written over 240 classical and jazz compositions for solo instruments, chamber groups, and jazz big band. His indie label, MEII Enterprises, has released 19 CDs of his original compositions and arrangements.
Marlow is founder/leader/pianist of The Heritage Ensemble, a quintet that performs his original
compositions and arrangements in various jazz, Afro-Caribbean, Brazilian, and
classical styles. The group’s latest album is “Obrigado Brasil!” (MEII
Enterprises 2016). The New York City Jazz
Record has described The Heritage Ensemble as “A cross-cultural
collaboration that spins and grooves.” Marlow received a 2010 “Meet the
Composer” grant for his work with The
Heritage Ensemble.
Marlow is also senior co-chair of the Milt Hinton Jazz
Perspectives concert series (now in its 25th season) at Baruch
College (The City University of New York), where he teaches courses in media
and culture. Author of eight books and 400+ articles, he has completed a draft
a book on jazz in China (due in fall 2017). He is a recipient of the 2016 John
Culkin Award from the Media Ecology Association and a recipient of the 2010
James W. Carey award for journalism excellence also from the Media Ecology
Association.