José Antonio Escobar continues his musical tour of South 
    America. My MusicWeb International colleague Göran Forsling praised Escobar’s 
    
last 
    volume, from Chile, for “absolutely stunning playing.” More: 
    “José Antonio Escobar is a fabulous guitarist, whose playing is so assured 
    that it sounds more or less improvised. It sounds effortless – and that 
    is not a euphemism for bland and unengaged.” I’m quoting him because 
    everything he says is true here, too. Truly this is a guitarist worth listening 
    to, or, if you’re a composer, worth writing for.
    
    My colleague took longer to appreciate the music in that Chilean album, because 
    it combined folk elements with post-1950s classical languages. That’s 
    not the case here. 
Guitar Music of Colombia feels like it’s 
    in a time warp, or a land untouched by modernist conservatory composition 
    teachers. These composers are using the materials that come most naturally 
    to them, to build music of exquisite craft and expressive fullness. Three 
    cheers for that.
    
    The most prominent name here is Julio Gentil Albarracín Montaña, a guitarist 
    and composer who founded a music school in Colombia to, in his words, “exchange 
    arms of destruction for musical instruments and develop a true tradition of 
    the guitar in Colombia.” The school, the Fundación Gentil Montaña, still 
    exists in Bogotá, and has a nice website with a biography of its founder. 
    This is how I found out that Naxos misspelled his name consistently across 
    this whole disc, either as Gentíl or Géntil. There’s no accent. Yes, 
    taken very literally, his name translates as “genteel mountain”.
    
    At any rate, in addition to teaching, Montaña wrote three 
Suites Colombianas, 
    a series dedicated to preserving Colombian dance and song styles. Thus you’ll 
    hear the rhythms of the bambuco where, traditionally, dancers face each other, 
    step forwards and back without touching each other, and at the end the man 
    gives the woman his handkerchief. Then there's the porro which is vibrant, 
    quick and influenced by Afro-Caribbean culture and the guabina: an old-fashioned 
    waltz. The “guabina viajera”, a gentle waltz tribute to a great 
    national guitarist, is especially endearing.
    
    Another bambuco comes from Adolfo Mejía. His piece from 1967 is the oldest 
    thing on the disc, and a sparkling minor-key opener.
    
    Lucas Saboya represents the new generation of Colombian composer, born in 
    1980. He and his brothers have a band which performs traditional music, and 
    his 
Suite Ernestina is utterly wonderful, particularly the first 
    movement, “Costurera”, a nocturne-style work which provides the 
    album’s finest moment of contemplation. Maybe that’s a tie with 
    the third-movement song, which really does seem like it’s a poem away 
    from being sung by a folksy mezzo on a patio as club patrons tap their feet, 
    hold hands, and sip on mojitos.
    
    There’s not much more to say about this disc. The music is uniformly 
    folksy, good-natured, brimming with tunes, and perfect for a sunny afternoon 
    or, if it’s raining, perfect for imagining that you are on holiday in 
    the tropics.
    
    Norbert Kraft and Bonnie Silver, the team of geniuses who have been producing 
    Naxos guitar albums for years, have recorded this recital as expertly as all 
    their previous efforts. Long may José Antonio Escobar’s delightful tour 
    of regional guitar music continue. He’s scored another big hit here.
    
    
Brian Reinhart