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Carol Bach-y-Rita

VOCALIST CAROL BACH-Y-RITA RELEASES MINHA CASA / my house on ARUGULA RECORDS A STUNNING BLEND OF JAZZ, BEBOP and BRAZILIAN MUSIC COMING SEPTEMBER 23, 2016

Listening to vocalist CAROL BACH-Y-RITA sing, it comes as no surprise that she’s also a dancer. Her singing has a supple fluidity that suggests a body in motion. On her newest CD, MINHA CASA / my house, she performs re-imagined standards and original songs that celebrate both well- and lesser-known Brazilian rhythms.

Bach-y-Rita’s band features stellar musicians who are leaders in their own right, including LARRY KOONSE on guitar, BILL CANTOS on piano, JOHN LEFTWICH on bass, and MIKE SHAPIRO on drums and percussion. They are joined on one track by Brazilian percussion master DUDU FUENTES. According to Bach-y-Rita, “I wanted to work with musicians who really know how to play both straight-ahead jazz and Brazilian music. There are a lot of great musicians who can play one or the other, but I’m lucky to work with bandmates who can soar in both styles.”

Bach-y-Rita is a jazz singer with a broad international outlook. She is conversant in five languages, including English, Spanish, French, Italian, and Brazilian Portuguese, and has lived in several countries including France, Italy, Mexico and Spain. Her father was Paul Bach-y-Rita, a well-known American neuroscientist whose family originally came from Catalonia where children are given two names: their father’s patronymic and their mother’s maiden name (i.e. Bach and Rita.) But it was her mother, an artist and Feldenkrais practitioner, who instilled in her a love of jazz and dance that has been tightly woven in the fabric of her life.

With its rich music and dance history that contains elements of African, Portuguese and other European influences, Bach-y-Rita was ineluctably drawn to Brazilian rhythms. A versatile artist, she’s also adept at arranging and composing. Bach-y-Rita teamed up with bassist John Leftwich to arrange “A Night in Tunisia” with Brazilian rhythms, singing lyrics by one of her idols, Eddie Jefferson, and she turned the Joni Mitchell/Charles Mingus tune “The Dry Cleaner from Des Moines” into a samba reggae, which is a rhythm that originated in Bahia and was derived as a blend of Brazilian samba with Jamaican reggae. Bach-y-Rita asked the respected Los Angeles guitarist Larry Koonse to arrange “You’d Be So Nice to Come Home To” (Cole Porter) with an Afro-Peruvian feel by singing the 6/8 bell patterns for him. Koonse also did a straight- ahead arrangement featuring the guitar trio on the lovely standard “Tis Autumn,” as well as a version of “Pra Quem Quiser Me Visitar” by Guinga for voice guitar and bass.

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REVIEW QUOTES:

CD RELEASE "WHAT LOVE IS" on Arugula Records

enticing ... alluring ... a bonanza of Brazilian-inflected music. - Zan Stewart

…as cool and soothing as a pitcher of caipirinhas on a sweltering summer afternoon. - Ken Franckling

What Love Is is one of the best vocal releases of recent times. -Scott Yanow

... lustrous, gorgeous ... sexy ... Wow this one is good! - Myrna Daniel LA Jazz Scene

FOR CAROL BACH-Y-RITA:

Jazz, Brazilian music and Salsa are... her “great loves.” And she sings them with the affection that only a true lover can express. - Don Heckman, Jazz Pick Of The Week

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