Biografía de Tiempo Libre
Jorge Gomez, Piano & Musical Director
Joaquin (El Kid) Díaz, Lead Vocal
Tebelio (Tony) Fonte, Bass
Luis Beltran Castillo, Saxophone & Flute
Leandro González, Congas
Raúl Rodríguez, Trumpet
Armando (Pututi) Arce, Drums
Ciudad de origen
Miami, FL
Biografía
The three-time Grammy-nominated Cuban music group Tiempo Libre is
one the hottest young Latin bands today. Equally at home in concert
halls, jazz clubs and dance venues, Tiempo Libre’s Miami-based
members are true modern heirs to the rich tradition of the music of
their native Cuba. Classically trained at Cuba’s premiere
conservatories, today, the group is a hit in the U.S. and abroad,
celebrated for its incendiary, joyful performances of timba, an
irresistible, dance-inducing mix of high-voltage Latin jazz and the
seductive rhythms of son.
The group’s new Sony Masterworks timba recording, My Secret Radio,
was released May 3, 2011. The album pays homage to Tiempo Libre’s
teenage years in Cuba, a time when the government forbade its
citizens to listen to American music and Russian had pulled its
support from the island. Inspired by their Afro-Cuban tradition,
but eager to catch the new trends and sounds coming from the U.S.,
Tiempo Libre’s members would fashion homemade antennas and secretly
listen to the music pulsating from Miami radio stations at night.
These secret radio sessions fueled Tiempo Libre’s dreams of living
in America, free to perform their songs and build the careers they
wanted while helping them gather the strength that it took to leave
it all behind – families, friends, a country, a life – to pursue
those dreams. The CD is their tribute to the many powerful voices,
including Michael Jackson, Chaka Khan, Gloria Estefan and Earth
Wind & Fire, that rocked their world. The album features guest
performances by jazz singer Rachelle Fleming and reunites Tiempo
Libre founder Jorge Gomez with the legendary Cuban songstress
Albita.
Tiempo Libre’s first recording for Sony Masterworks, Bach in
Havana, was nominated for a Grammy award for “Best Tropical Latin
Album” and featured tracks with Paquito D’Rivera and Yosvany Terry.
The CD, a fusion of Bach with Afro-Cuban rhythms, reflects the
duality of Tiempo Libre’s childhood days studying classical music
and nights spent playing timba music. Released in May, 2009, the
album received airplay on more than 200 radio stations, was hailed
by Latin Jazz Network as “a landmark recording in the sense that
Miles Davis's Kind of Blue was approximately 50 years ago” and was
selected as a best pick in new Latin music by The Miami Herald. The
group performed “Tu Conga Bach” from the CD on the October 27, 2009
Dancing with the Stars. In conjunction with the release of Bach in
Havana, the family behind Bustelo Café – for the first time in 80
years – changed its Bustelo Café coffee can to feature Tiempo Libre
with a free music download.
Tiempo Libre was invited to collaborate on the duet “Para Ti” with
violinist Joshua Bell, which was featured on Bell’s September album
At Home with Friends. The group also performed the track with Bell
on The Tonight Show with Conan O’Brien, the January 21st Live From
Lincoln Center: Joshua Bell @ Home with Friends PBS Special and on
WNYC radio’s popular program Soundcheck. In the fall of 2008,
Tiempo Libre brought its dynamic Afro-Cuban beat to leading flutist
Sir James Galway’s album, O’Reilly Street, released by the RCA Red
Seal label. The album features an exciting new Latin jazz
arrangement of music from the Claude Bolling Jazz Suites including
“Baroque and Blue”, as well as a timba take on Bach's “Badinerie”
and a number of vibrant new compositions all by Tiempo Libre’s
musical director and pianist Jorge Gomez. The result is rich in the
traditions of multiple genres, authentic yet emotionally seductive,
transcending the borders between classical, jazz and Cuban
music.
Following up being named “Best Latin Band 2008” by the Miami New
Times, Tiempo Libre brought a true Cuban experience to its American
home-town of Miami, with the interactive musical production Miami
Libre, which premiered at The Adrienne Arsht Center for the
Performing Arts in July, 2008, featuring a
cast of 25, including Tiempo Libre’s seven members. Miami Libre,
based on the band’s collective immigrant experience, is told
through English and Spanish narrative, sizzling music and explosive
dance.
Tiempo Libre’s members were all enjoying thriving careers in Latin
music performing, touring and recording with such artists as
Albita, Cachao, Arturo Sandoval, NG La Banda, Gonzalo Rubalcaba and
Isaac Delgado, when the seven extraordinary musicians came together
to realize their collective musical dream: to create the first
authentic all-Cuban timba band in the United States. Their
eagerness to share their music with others led these multi-talented
individuals to come together between projects to develop their new
style together, hence the name Tiempo Libre (Free Time).
Since their formation in 2001, the members of Tiempo Libre have
been on a mission: to share the musical heritage in which they grew
up with as wide an audience as possible, reinterpreting and
reinvigorating traditional Cuban music with a youthful, modern
sound and forging a new style born from the meeting of their Cuban
roots and their new American experience. In Summer 2002, at the
group’s Ravinia Festival debut opening for Celia Cruz, Tiempo Libre
dazzled a crowd of more than 12,000 people. They were quickly
reengaged by Ravinia for Summer 2003, where they shared a bill with
Aretha Franklin, performing before an enthusiastic crowd of 20,000.
Summer 2003 also included performances at the new Heineken Jazz
Festival in Hua Hin, Thailand where Tiempo Libre were the
undeniable sensation of the Festival. Return trips to Asia have
included sold out shows at Hong Kong’s Kwai Tsing Theatre and the
Dewan Filharmonik Petronas, the glorious concert hall at the foot
of the famous twin towers in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia and at the 2005
Java Jazz Festival in Jakarta, Indonesia. Since that time, the
group’s busy touring schedule in the United States has included
performances at the Playboy Jazz Festival at the Hollywood Bowl,
Miami’s JVC Jazz Festival, Yoshi’s in Oakland, CA, SOB’s in New
York City, Jazz at Lincoln Center, Celebrate Brooklyn, New Orleans
Jazz and Heritage Festival, Festival International de Louisiane,
Rochester International Jazz Festival, the Royal Conservatory in
Toronto, the Lincoln Theater in Napa Valley, Boston’s Sculler’s
Jazz Club, Society of the Performing Arts in Houston, Kimmel
Center, Orange County Performing Arts Center, California Center for
the Arts, New Haven Jazz Festival, California World Fest, Lotus
Music Festival, New York’s River-to-River Festival at the South
Street Seaport, as well as the Colorado, Interlochen, Green and
Eastern music festivals. August, 2005 brought Tiempo Libre’s
European debut. Among the highlights of that tour, was Tiempo
Libre’s performance at the closing concert of the new Tuscan Sun
Festival in Cortona, Italy where the band wowed a sold-out house.
Subsequent tours have brought sold-out houses in Italy, Greece and
Turkey.
In January 2005, Tiempo Libre made their debut album on the
Shanachie label – Arroz con Mango – which was both a tribute to the
deep Cuban roots of Tiempo Libre’s members and a celebration of
their new life in the US. Released to universally glowing reviews,
Arroz con Mango received tremendous attention in the press and was
featured in numerous national publications including Latin Beat,
Hispanic Magazine, Jazziz and American Airlines’ American Way
Magazine. They performed songs from the new album on many of the
highest-rated Spanish-language shows and were featured on NPR’s
Latino USA. Fulfilling the meaning of its title (“arroz con mango”
is a Cuban slang expression meaning something completely out of the
ordinary), the album was nominated for a 2006 Grammy Award in the
category of Best Salsa/Meringue Album. One year later, the band
released Lo Que Esperabas – What You’ve Been Waiting For. And, once
again, its title proved prophetic when the group was nominated for
its second Grammy, this time for Best Latin Tropical album.
In Spring 2007, Tiempo Libre embarked upon another exciting
project, the creation of a new work – Rumba Sinfónica – for
symphony orchestra and Cuban band. The composition, a collaboration
with the highly-respected Venezuelan classical composer Ricardo
Lorenz, was commissioned by the Minnesota Orchestra, the Detroit
Symphony, the Ravinia Festival and the Festival of the Arts Boca.
Since its premiere in Minneapolis in November, 2007, Tiempo Libre
has performed Rumba Sinfónica with a number of orchestras
including: the National Arts Centre, Dallas Symphony and Oklahoma
City Philharmonic Orchestras and the DuPage, Syracuse, Portland
(ME), San Antonio, North Carolina and Hartford Symphonies.
In addition to their performing and recording careers, the members
of Tiempo Libre are particularly committed to the sharing of their
rich musical traditions through outreach and educational activities
and have participated in artist in residence programs at Michigan
State University and Interlochen Academy. The group has also become
known for its inspiring classes on rumba, Latin jazz and
traditional Cuban music, designed to reach audiences of all ages
and backgrounds.
Tiempo Libre is: Musical Director Jorge Gomez on keyboard; Raúl
Rodríguez, trumpet; Leandro Gonzalez, congas; Tebelio (Tony) Fonte,
bass; Armando (Pututi) Arce, drums; Joaquin (El Kid) Diaz, lead
vocal; and Luis Beltran Castillo, saxophone & flute.