Cafe Jazzorca
Free jazz and experimental music
LocationMexico City, Mexico]
Coordinates19°22′4″N 99°8′24″W / 19.36778°N 99.14000°W / 19.36778; -99.14000

Jazzorca is Mexico City's most prominent dedicated free jazz and experimental music venue,[1][2] founded by multi-instrumentalist Germán Bringas in 1994.

Musicians

Mexican musicians who have played at Café Jazzorca are Bringas' group Zeropoint, Ernesto Andriano, Alain Cano, Gibrán Andrade, Iván Bringas, Carlos Alegre, Arturo Baez, Marcos Miranda, Ana Ruiz, Remi Alvarez, and Itzam Cano.[3] Non-Mexican musicians who have played there are Marco Eneidi, Daniel Jodocy, Feike de Jong, Fabio Pellegrini, Misha Marks, Jasmine Lovell-Smith, Peeter Uuskyla, Frode Gjerstad, Alfonso Malfón, Michael Schulz, Martin High de Prime, Elliott Levin, Phillip Lauzier, Gabriel Lauber, and Darrell Zimmerman.[3]

Nanahuatl was recorded at Café Jazzorca in December 2009 and released two years later. Artists include Germán Bringas, Iván Bringas, María Lipkau and Julian Bonequi.[4]

Jazzorca Records

Bringas founded the record label Jazzorca Records.[2] Some of their recordings include:

  • Bringas, Germán, Ser doble (Being double), Mexico, Jazzorca Records, 1994. Compositions of the author, Miroslav Vitous and Jan Garbarek.[5]
  • Bringas, German, La triste maquina de hacer arroz. (The sad machine to make rice), Mexico, Jazzorca-Option Sonica, 1997.[5]
  • Bringas, Germán and el Engrane Amarillo, Mexico, Jazzorca and Smogless Records, 1999. Compositions of the author.[5]
  • Zero Point, Zero Point (2005), Mexico, Jazzorca Records, 2005.[3]
  • Alvarez, Remi, Hernan Hecht, Darrell Zimmerman, Carlos Alegre, German Bringas, Itzam Cano, Gabriel Lauber, Free Radical Jazz. Recorded live at Cafe Jazzorca 2005–2007, Mexico, Jazzorca Records, 2007.[3]
  • Alonso, Chefa, Ana Ruiz, Adriana Camacho, et al. Free Jazz Women and Some Men, Jazzorca Records, 2015.[6]

References

  1. "Liberan su espíritu con free jazz - El Mañana - Revista". Elmanana.com.mx. Archived from the original on October 15, 2007. Retrieved April 18, 2013.
  2. 1 2 R. Jose Fernandez (May 1, 2001). "Bringas takes experimental music to the edge. (German Bringas review) (Brief Article)". Business Mexico. American Chamber of Commerce of Mexico.
  3. 1 2 3 4 "Gabriel Lauber - Releases". gabriellauber.com. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved April 18, 2013.
  4. "Nanahuatl". Realtime Music Archives. Retrieved April 18, 2013.
  5. 1 2 3 Alain Derbez (2001). El jazz en México: datos para una historia ( Volume 603 of Colección Popular Especiales de a la Orilla del Viento). Fondo de Cultura Economica. p. 460. ISBN 9681652126.
  6. "Jazz y cultura popular – CON LOS AUDÍFONOS PUESTOS" (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2019-04-11.

Further reading

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