This is an anthology compiled 
                  from many Naxos guitar recordings of Latin-American guitar music 
                  ranging from the most serious classical works, such as the Villa 
                  Lobos Concerto to popular tunes, such as, again, the 
                  Villa Lobos Suite Populaire, and the Ponce. As a rule 
                  the editor has sensibly found music which ranges towards as 
                  well as away from the typical hot latin rhythms you expect from 
                  the genre and preferred unusual pieces, more thoughtful, more 
                  structured, some more placid in mood, some more angular and 
                  experimental. Hence this collection will balance most other 
                  recordings of Latin-American guitar music you might have and 
                  help round out your collection.
                
The Lauro Joropo 
                  is high energy fun. Brouwer’s November Day is a lovely, 
                  sad, thoughtful tune in an interesting arrangement. Pereira’s 
                  Gathering in Planaltina is an angular depiction of a 
                  happy crowd with abrupt changes in rhythm, texture, and dynamics. 
                  Blazquez’s Kite Flying Dream is an intriguingly modern 
                  tuneful piece built on a flying dance rhythm over a varied ostinato. 
                  Simon’s Peanut Seller is a familiar tune freshly worked 
                  out with virtuoso multiple voices into a real show-stopper. 
                  Pujol’s Elegy on the Death of a Tango Player is a three 
                  movement suite based on simple, arresting harmonies, with a 
                  beautiful second movement in “raindrop prelude” style, and a 
                  joyous finale.
                
The Piazzolla pieces are 
                  uniformly disappointing. They are aimed exactly at American 
                  TV music pop aesthetic where just a touch of ethnic flavor must 
                  be swept away by familiar generic ‘swing’ before anyone gets 
                  frightened by the foreignness of it all or feels displaced by 
                  the unfamiliarity. They are the only pieces on the disks which 
                  pander to vulgar taste. At the other extreme are the Villa-Lobos 
                  pieces which represent a truly original mind, so abhorrent of 
                  cliché as to border on the astringent. Perhaps I should concede 
                  that Villa-Lobos may have been moving comfortably within native 
                  Brazilian styles but to others elsewhere it seems brilliantly 
                  and uncompromisingly original, rather like Bartók’s view of 
                  authentic Hungarian music. Villa-Lobos is an acquired taste 
                  but, once acquired, becomes compulsive.
                
Paul Shoemaker