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Carmen Cuesta: vocals, percussion
Chuck Loeb: guitars, keyboards,
drum & percussion programming
Will Lee: fretless bass
Brian Killeen: bass
Wolfgang Haffner: drums
Brian Dunne: drum loops
Josh Dion: drum loops
Michael Brecker: EWI (electronic
wind instrument)
Matt King: piano
Till Brönner: trumpet &
flugelhorn
David Charles: percussion
Lizzy Loeb: vocals
Produced by Carmen Cuesta & Chuck Loeb
Recorded & mixed by Chuck Loeb and Dennis Wall
| Aclarate |
[mp3 file] |
| Llevame |
[mp3 file] |
| In The Rain |
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| La Paz |
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| Todo Para Ti |
[mp3 file] |
| You Still Don't Know
Me |
[mp3 file] |
| I Am Thou |
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| A Matter Of Time |
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| Tarde |
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| Me Voy |
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| Religions |
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| Suddenly Love |
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Since I can remember, music has been the centerpiece of my life.
In Spain, as a teenager, I was always involved in some kind of musical
project and the performing arts - regardless of the great efforts
my parents exerted to keep me away from them. Coming to America
to live with Chuck, meant an even greater involvement with music,
especially with the jazz world. It gave a new dimension to my life;
not only I was away from home and newly wed, which was a challenge
right there, I was also living with a musician, and everything we
did was related somehow with music. I no longer had to worry about
my parents opposition to a music career. I have been blessed with
the musicians that I surrounded myself with, both in Spain and America.
Music brought Chuck and I together, and is still the magic glue
that keeps us going.
Chuck has been a great help to my music. At this point he can read
my mind in musical terms. He takes my rudimental piano or guitar
and voice demos and ideas, and arranges them according to my wishes.
It’s amazingly fun when we actually work together, which is
surprisingly not as often as we wish. Even though it is harder,
these days we record by ourselves at home and without an engineer.
He comes later to help with the mixing and mastering. Being alone
the two of us gives us more freedom to have differences of opinions,
more time, more intimacy, better fights and leeway to express our
emotions. Sometimes we cry together over lyrics or the way they
are being sung. I am a very direct person, because I believe that
only the truth can take you to places, some times I might seem heartless,
but when I like something he knows I mean it.
Sometimes Chuck and I compose melodies together. Some of Chucks
#1 hits on the radio we wrote together: “The Music Inside”,
“Sarao”, “Blue Kiss”.... And I think that
“Llevame” - which is also included on his latest CD
Presence is going to be a hit as well, although I am not
as good predicting hits of mine.
In these twenty something years, Chuck’s career has gotten
most of the attention, while I have chosen to remain in the background,
doing what I felt was most important to me; creating a home and
a family, raising our two daughters, studying English literature
and writing songs. Music has been always the main ingredient in
our lives. Through our home many great musicians have come and gone,
recording, rehearsing or just to have a meal together (I love cooking
and feeding people). Musicians have become my friends and my family.
Now I would like to make song writing and performing the centerpiece
of my life. All these years music has been the friend that I could
always turn to whenever I needed to. Now it is time I give back
to music.
You Still Don’t Know Me,
my latest CD, has been in labor for a couple of years. Chuck has
been very busy with other projects that actually pay our bills,
and I am unpredictable and easily distracted by gardening, decorating
and other aspects of regular living. These last years have also
been especially frustrating in other ways, in terms of the Bush
administration’s foreign policies and the entire World’s
politics, and most distressing of all my father’s death. Everything
around me affects me, and so, when the CD was completed I found
it a bit gloomy, but what the heck! The world is pretty gloomy right
now anyway. The most important thing is that every song comes from
the heart, and that it also full of hope.
On this CD I have musicians that really matter to me. They are
not only some of the best musicians in the world but they are also
my friends. Each one makes a very special contribution to the song
they play on; Till Broenner, Will Lee, Wolfgang Haffner and of course
Chuck Loeb are some of the names you’ll recognize immediately.
There is also a solo by the great Michael Brecker, who as most of
you know recently passed away. I will speak more about him later.
And now the songs:
The opening song “Aclarate”
(Be clear) is not necessarily autobiographical. It is a reaction
about couples that aren’t clear with each other, playing mental
games and never facing the truth. I see it in people that I know.
I recognize the struggles that those attitudes cause, and how they
always end up in divorce. Other ways, it is a breezy song with a
very infectious groove. Chuck trades off quoting the melody and
adding the solo with his signature jazz guitar sound
“Llevame” (Take me there)
is actually a very old song. Chuck and I wrote it together twenty-five
years ago, when we had our first group called “Parallelo”.
This song reminds me of that time. We used to play in a club in
Greenwich Village, New York, called “Seventh Avenue South”.
It was a very famous Jazz club owned by the Brecker Brothers. Unfortunately
it doesn’t exist any more. It was an amazing scene with world
class musicians performing every single night. I even saw one night
Whitney Houston singing background vocals for her mother, Cissy
Houston years before she became a star. I got to meet and perform
with many great musicians there.
“In the Rain” is an opportunity
to have Will Lee doing “his thing”, and to have Chuck
play the sitar. It’s a dreamy kind of song where sharing wins
over loneliness.
“La Paz” (“Peace”)
represents hope. Hope is always in the simple things, the ones we
take for granted: the air , the sun, the water and all nature. Chuck
wrote the music for this song, and Lizzy and I came up with the
lyrics on a sunny morning over tea in the garden. It was a beautiful
moment. Lizzy, my daughter sings the English lyrics. Her voice is
velvet to my ears.
“Todo Para Ti” (Everything
for you) is the love of a Mother, unconditional and without boundaries.
I didn’t want to include the word “love” in the
song, it would have been redundant. Michael Brecker plays the “EWI”
(electric wind instrument) and he recorded his solo on this song
during a long hard struggle with a serious illness he was going
through, and ended up being one of the last recordings before his
tragic death. His participation means the world to me. I love and
admire him as a musician and a human being and my heart goes out
to Susan, and his children in this time of loss for them. Hi is
obviously sorely missed by Chuck and I and the entire music world.
“You Still Don’t Know Me”.
It is unfortunate but true, that there is always a possibility of
being misunderstood by those you think know you best. It’s
a feeling of defeat, helplessness and loneliness. The piano solo
by Chuck is one of my favorites on the CD.
“I Am Thou” (Soy tu),
is a desire to get back to nature, and get away from the man made
world. The farther away we get from it, the closer we are with each
other as human beings. Civilization separates us somehow, nature
and truth bring people together. Till Broenner, once again, played
a heart-felt solo that fuses with the song as one.
“A Matter of Time”, was
heavily influence by my fathers death. I never thought about how
quickly life passes by. It has influenced the way I think and the
way I live. Nothing really matters except the present time. There
isn’t any time to be wasted on the past, and the future is
made by the way we live the now. Everything is in constant change,
and what seems desirable today might be the cause of despair tomorrow.
The beautiful sunset today would never repeat itself, so don’t
miss it. Matt King, who adds accompaniment and solo here, is an
excellent pianist that plays in Chuck’s band. I love his playing
on this song.
“Tarde” (meaning “late”)
is a song that, again, deals with braking up with somebody after
a long relationship. I see it happening everywhere. The production
of the song evolved over a long period of time, and we changed the
arrangement several times. First it was just piano and it was much
longer then we shortened it and used a modulation. The guitar solo
by Chuck was improvised very quickly and eventually became part
of the song. So I added a vocal chorus on top of it to connect it.
In the end it is neither just a solo, nor a chorus. The real solo
happens at the end of the song, which was a moment in the studio
that even includes noises from his guitar. These noises worked well
with the song, so we kept them.
“Me Voy” (I’m leaving)
is a song I composed and recorded when I was seventeen or eighteen
years old. I was playing at a club in Madrid two summers ago, and
someone brought me the record, one of those vinyl long plays. I
was really happy because I had lost the only copy I had of it a
long time ago. So I decided to rescue this song and recorded again.
I left the arrangement very simple, just like the way I used to
play it.
Originally I started the song “Religions”
with parallel layers of chanting voices from different religions.
I had a lot of fun doing this, but at the end we decided not to
keep it. We didn’t want it to sound hokey or predictable.
The tone of this song is dark. When I see the struggles that religions
cause in the world, and how they are an excuse for hate and destruction,
I feel that we are still in the “Dark ages”. The Holy
wars are still going, almost a millennium after they started.
You Still Don’t Know Me, the title of this CD, means
also that people out there don’t know me yet, because of the
choice I made of staying in the background and not to perform live
on regular basis. I am going to change this. As I said before, I
want to go out and give back to music. I want to share my music
with people in a more direct way, so
they can Know me.
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