JOAQUIN DIAZ, ON TOUR
[DUNKELBUNT]
A NEW DAY; LAYA PROJECT REMIXED
ADDIS ACOUSTIC PROJECT
AFRO ROOTS WORLD MUSIC FESTIVAL
AMADOU & MARIAM
ANTÓNIO ZAMBUJO
APHRODESIA
BALKANBEATS
BANCO DE GAIA
BOBAN I MARKO MARKOVIC ORKESTAR
BOBAN I MARKO MARKOVIC
BOY WITHOUT GOD
C.J. CHENIER
CARLOS GOGO GOMEZ
CHOBAN ELEKTRIK
CHOPTEETH
CHRISTIANE D
CHRISTINE VAINDIRLIS
CLARA PONTY
COPAL
CUCHATA
DAMJAN KRAJACIC
DANIEL CROS
DEBO & FENDIKA
DEL CASTILLO
DR JAYANTHI KUMARESH
EARTHRISE SOUNDSYSTEM
EGYPT NOIR
ELIN FURUBOTN
EMILY SMITH
FANFARE CIOCARLIA VS. BOBAN & MARKO MARKOVIC
FEUFOLLET
FIAF PRESENTS WORLD NOMADS MOROCCO: MUSIC
FOOTSTEPS IN AFRICA
GECKO TURNER
GENTICORUM
GEOFF BERNER
GIANMARIA TESTA
GODS ROBOTS
GUARCO
HUUN HUUR TU
INDIAN OCEAN
IRENE JACOB & FRANCIS JACOB
JANAKA SELEKTA
JANYA
JERRY LEAKE
JOAQUIN DIAZ
JOEL RUBIN
JORGE STRUNZ
JOSEF KOUMBAS
JOYFUL NOISE (I GRADE RECORDS)
JUST A BAND
KAMI THOMPSON
KARTICK & GOTAM
KHALED
KHING ZIN & SHWE SHWE KHAING
KITKA'S CAUCASIAN CONNECTIONS PROJECT PERFORMANCES AND WORKSHOPS
KMANG KMANG
KOTTARASHKY AND THE RAIN DOGS
LA CHERGA
LAC LA BELLE
LAYA PROJECT
LENI STERN
LES TRIABOLIQUES
LISTEN FOR LIFE
LOBI TRAORÉ
LO'JO
LOKESH
MAGNIFICO
MAHALA RAI BANDA
MIDNITE
MOHAMMED ALIDU AND THE BIZUNG FAMILY
MR. SOMETHING SOMETHING
MY NAME IS KHAN
NAWAL
NAZARENES
NO STRANGER HERE (EARTHSYNC)
OCCIDENTAL BROTHERS ON TOUR
OCCIDENTAL GYPSY
OREKA TX
ORQUESTRA CONTEMPORÂNEA DE OLINDA
PABLO SANCHEZ
PEDRO MORAES
RAYA BRASS BAND
SALSA CELTICA
SAMITE
SARA BANLEIGH
SARAH AROESTE
SELAELO SELOTA
SHYE BEN-TZUR
SIA TOLNO
SIBIRI SAMAKE
SISTER FA
SLIDE TO FREEDOM II
SONIA BREX
SOSALA
SWEET ELECTRA
SYSTEMA SOLAR
TAGA SIDIBE
TAJ WEEKES
TARANA
TARUN NAYAR
TE VAKA
TELEPATH
THE MOUNTAIN MUSIC PROJECT
THE NATIVE AMERICA NORTH SHOWCASE
THE SPY FROM CAIRO
TITO GONZALEZ
TOUSSAINT
VARIOUS ARTISTS
VARIOUS ARTISTS
WATCHA CLAN
WHEN HARRY TRIES TO MARRY SOUNDTRACK
WOMEXIMIZER
WOMEXIMIZER
ZDOB SI ZDUB
ZIETI
Interview

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Gozamos , Interview >>

“Y cómo está la gente de Chicago?” “And how are people in Chicago doing?” That’s how Joaquín Díaz starts our conversation on the phone, speaking from his home in Montreal. I am curious as to how a musician from the Dominican Republic came to reside in that much colder norther land: “It was love! Love hooked me! She threw that fish line and hooked me good!”, he laughs, explaining that he went to Canada on tour, and met his wife and then settled there.

Canada is a long, long way from his birthplace San Pedro de Macorís, on the eastern side of the island. And Díaz also chose a different path from what his hometown is known for:  “It’s a baseball player’s town. Sammy Sosa and Alfonso Soriano and many of the best ball players hail from San Pedro de Macorís,” he comments proudly. However, there was never any question that music and not sports was his destiny. He describes how life with his dad, a musician who played the Cuban guitar, had him playing the accordion at 9 years of age. Basically self-taught, Díaz plays a little bachata, a lot of merengue, and he is also ver fond of mangulina dance beats, which combine European-based rhythms like the ‘chotis’ (from the Bohemian Schottische dance) and the syncopated rhythms of the Africans brought to the island to work in the sugar cane fields. These are all played on accordions that came to the Dominican Republic when traded by merchant marines, explains Díaz, calling this instrument that became so popular throughout the Americas a “little organ.”

Díaz, a master accordion player, performs with several instruments (I saw him at last year’s World Music Expo in Copenhagen, where even the cold Danish Fall could not keep him from having us heat up on the dance floor) and he trades back and forth between bigger and smaller versions. But he prefers to use the smaller accordion, he clarifies: “Dominican music, you have to really attack it! And that’s easier to do with the little, lighter, two-row accordion.”

Although Díaz plays both original and classic Dominican tunes, he is beginning to explore fusing his more traditional sounds with jazz, but never forgetting the roots, he declares “because, the folkloric sounds give it a lot of caché.”  But no matter where his fusions take him,  Díaz exclaims with a hearty laugh: “It´s about making people happy! That’s what we have to share! No matter how poor we are, no matter what our circumstances, we are a happy people – that’s the Caribbean spirit  - Puerto Ricans, Cubans, Dominicans – that’s just the way we are!”

 09/20/11 >> go there

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