Ernesto Lecuona was 
                born in Guanabacoa, a suburb of Havana 
                in Cuba, and had his first piano lessons 
                with his sister Ernestina. He played 
                in public at the age of five and by 
                twelve he was already writing his own 
                compositions and worked as a silent 
                movie pianist. He made his American 
                debut in New York at nineteen and completed 
                his studies with Joaquin Nin and Maurice 
                Ravel. He founded the Havana Symphony 
                Orchestra and also a dance band, later 
                known as The Lecuona Cuban Boys, which 
                was a success in both Europe and the 
                Americas. Their recordings can still 
                be heard. Finally, and most importantly, 
                he was a prolific composer of – mostly 
                – popular music, but he also wrote theatre 
                music, zarzuelas, ballets and an opera. 
                There are also no less than thirty-seven 
                orchestral works, among them three for 
                piano and orchestra. He also wrote several 
                film scores. He composed 406 songs, 
                many of which have become evergreens, 
                like Siboney and Siempre en 
                mi corazón. 
              
 
              
"Lecuona … was 
                probably the first successful ‘crossover’ 
                musician" says the liner notes. 
                His piano pieces, numbering 176 and 
                the main concern of this review, belong 
                in both the "light" and the 
                "serious" camps. There is 
                a basic light-hearted atmosphere about 
                much of his work, with a gift for melodies 
                and music that is often rhythmically 
                attractive. "Lecuona’s greatest 
                gift is his ability to embed Afro-Cuban 
                music in his own works, producing fabulous 
                collections of Dances for piano", 
                says the notes. The six Danzas Afro-Cubanas, 
                which conclude this recital, are thrilling 
                to listen to, varied in mood and rhythms 
                and also colourful with inventive use 
                of the whole keyboard. Some of the pieces 
                remind me of the music Louis Moreau 
                Gottschalk wrote almost a century earlier, 
                which was well ahead of its time. Listen 
                to track 16, for example, Danza negra. 
                And the nightly La conga de media 
                noche (track 15) with its bold harmonic 
                language, not fighting shy of dissonances, 
                is a sophisticated composition that 
                Ravel might have nodded approvingly 
                at. Track 19, finally, Danza Lucumi, 
                is a real swinger. 
              
 
              
His most famous larger-scale 
                piano work is probably the Suite 
                Andalucía from 1927, inspired 
                by this region in Spain. The six movements 
                are well differentiated, each with its 
                distinctive character. The second movement, 
                Andalucía, should be well-known 
                to many readers, at least those with 
                memories from decades gone by; even 
                more the last of them, Malagueña, 
                which must exist in dozens of arrangements, 
                besides the piano original played here. 
                In some of the pieces there are also 
                darker streaks, more mournful music, 
                some of it quite dissonant; try the 
                second half of Alhambra (track 
                3). 
              
 
              
In between these two 
                larger suites there are a number of 
                songs and dances, two of them written 
                by Ernesto’s sister, mainly belonging 
                to the category "light music". 
                These are melodic, even sentimental, 
                but mostly beautifully unassuming. I 
                got this disc the day before New Year’s 
                Eve and chose it as background music 
                for our traditional New Year’s Dinner 
                with good and longstanding friends who 
                are not exactly classically inclined. 
                They liked it enormously and intend 
                to come back next New Year. Not all 
                my records are of the calibre that they 
                can be appreciated both as wall-paper 
                and for close listening. 
              
 
              
The pianist, Brazilian-born 
                but London-based Clélia Iruzun, 
                has a natural feeling for this type 
                of music. It shouldn’t be over-sophisticated 
                but it must be elegant and rhythmically 
                alive. To me her playing sounds utterly 
                idiomatic. 
              
 
              
The cover photo, which 
                can be seen above, shows the Lecuona 
                Cuban Boys on a 1930s photo with Ernesto 
                on the extreme left. The violinist standing 
                to the left of the female dancer is 
                Alberto Bolet, brother of the famous 
                Cuban pianist Jorge Bolet, and the male 
                dancer is an easily recognizable Buster 
                Keaton. 
              
 
              
All in all a disc that 
                I have already played for pleasure several 
                times and intend to return to every 
                so often when in Lecuonan mood. 
              
Göran Forsling