MP3 Claudia Gomez - Majagua
Jazzy Colombian music accompanied by percussion and call and response melodies with rhythmic grooves that will take you to the soul of Colombia, a tropical land located between the caribbean and the andean mountains of South America.
12 MP3 Songs
JAZZ: World Fusion, WORLD: World Fusion
Details:
CLAUDIA GOMEZ- BIOGRAPHY
I was born in Medellìn, Colombia, and I’m descendent of a musical family (my mother, Angela recorded 7 LP’s of boleros, all my brothers are musicians and my grandfather, Enrique was the co-founder of the first Jazz Band in Medellìn in 1935). I began playing guitar at age 12, and at 18, was traveling Colombia, with an all-female Quartet “Ellas”. But my professional life really began in London, where, with my oldest brother Luciano, we began to search for a way to make a living through music. I must admit that it was my brother’s skills and convincing talent that made us - two Colombians, singing in English in England! Our repertoire was made up of songs from The Beatles, James Taylor, Joni Mitchell, Bob Dylan and many others. It was a truly beautiful experience.
I returned to Colombia in 1976 and soon started to discover my Latin background. Those were the days of world cultural revolution, but in Colombia things were still very conventional, and a girl singing at night in bars and clubs was not well seen. I moved to Bogotá where I found some people who, like me, where willing to risk society finger pointing, and we made our own family of musicians. I sang in English and in Portuguese. I felt I wasn’t ready to sing in Spanish yet. I needed to find my own sound, my own vocal style. Playing Brazilian and Cuban music made me think of my own roots. If Colombia had the same cultural mix as Brazil or Cuba, why did our music feel old and stocked, and theirs feel fresh and evolved? That’s when I started to travel to small and forgotten places, looking for Colombian folk music, and found great people who gave me that Colombian identity I had been looking for. However, that music needed a little shaking; a little blend from somewhere. I wasn’t prepared to do it just yet, and I knew I had to look for it somewhere else, away from home. My inner soul was looking for a change.
In 1983, invited by my brother Luciano, I visited the San Francisco Bay Area and experienced the music scene there. I knew immediately that this was my place. I found a vibrant, professional, and creative - day and night music life - that opened up horizons in my mind, and musically awakened me. I stayed there 15 years. I wanted to learn jazz but of course, my strength was going to be my Latin musical background. I found a group of people who were making their living playing Brazilian music, and I immersed myself in that culture firsthand, learning from outstanding Brazilian musicians, all the subtleties, beauty, evolution and creativity of their music. It was a fountain of harmony for my guitar playing, a guide for my vocal development and a marvelous experience in band leading. At the same time all these musicians were also jazz players, some, Americans who loved South American music. In 1989 I documented this Brazilian phase of my life in a recording called Claudia Canta Brasil. That recording opened the doors to pursue my own sound. I went back to my roots and started writing music that contained Colombian rhythmic elements, covered with jazzy Brazilian harmonies; with entwined melodic patterns from both cultures. The result was documented in my 3rd album Tierradentro, published by Green Linnet Records (recorded in 1992 but released in 1996). Almost at the same time I was called to record another album with the purpose of showing the purity of music using no equalization, no compression, no edits, in other words, just like they used to record in the 40’s. It was a challenging experience, and that was Salamandra, recorded in 1992 for Clarity Recordings. Both albums gave me stability as a musician in the privileged San Francisco Bay Area, a place that’s still in my heart, because it was there that I truly became a musician, helped by all the generosity and support of friends, musicians, club owners and agents (believe it or not!). I also finished my school degree, a Bachelor of Arts in Music, with an emphasis in World Music, and had the privilege of studying with African master drummers, Indian vocal teachers, as well as experiencing a year of teaching Afro-Colombian songs for a vocal group at the same university.
I kept well connected to my homeland through periodic trips to inlands and the coast, where I continued the search for my music ancestors. During 1994 I spent the whole year in Colombia, traveling, performing, showing my music and developing a repertoire of original arrangements and compositions based in Colombian traditional music, with a modern approach to it. I performed that repertoire for the next 9 years.
In 1998 I was ready to move on and look for new horizons again, and decided to go to Spain, an old love during my years in London. It was in London that I had fallen in love with flamenco, had met Joaquin Sabina, a singer songwriter who shared many music nights with me singing at Costa del Sol, and I needed to see what was happening in Europe. I landed in Madrid in July 1998. If I had been an exotic musician in California, in Spain I was totally unknown, something that I enjoyed for a while because it allowed me to reflect on my life and my commitment to music. I loved Madrid’s intense night life, I loved starting all over again (well, almost!), it brought back memories of my early music life struggle. Spain has a way of bringing everyone down to earth, there’s little time to be an arrogant artist; everyone is in the same pot. I met wonderful and outstanding musicians: Jerry Gonzalez, Pavel Urkiza, Gladston Galliza, Caramelo, the San Martin brothers, Rosalia, all marvelous friends and artists with whom I shared the stage many times and who I keep in my heart. There I recorded my bolero-jazz album Vivir Cantando. Even though there’s a definite melancholy in it, it is still one of my best recorded albums.
I traveled, at my delight, throughout Europe, and knew it was going to be my last stop before going home for good. And I did… I came back to Colombia in September 2002. I have been fortunate enough in life to have always done just what I wanted, period. I’ve moved through places and people with a certainty that they will always be in my heart and in my mind, but also, that I can move away whenever my music or my life needs it. I now live between Bogotá and my hometown, Medellìn. In two years I’ve built a house, made a new album Majagua, work with the government developing music projects for needed people in all regions of Colombia, teach guitar, do vocal workshops, and take care of my mother, and I’m very happy doing all that. To record Majagua has been my highest accomplishment so far, because it was made up of a mature repertoire that was weaved day by day, note by note, with the help and inspiration of all musicians from all over the world and it was a gift I gave to Colombia and its musicians. They received it so well that it made me feel at home again. And here I am. I work with very young and also very old people, helping them direct their careers with the confidence and certainty that they, like me, have chosen the right path. I’m very happy that I’m getting to see with my own eyes the evolution I always envisioned for Colombian music. I’m just thankful I have had the privilege to travel, to share this life experience with so many different people and cultures. I’m a happy woman.