It is accepted for creative artists to tug on the reigns of the expected. In the
worlds of jazz and contemporary music, musicians are instructed to respect
the conventional parameters of the genre they learn. But it is for the musicians
to push the limits of the rules in order to make new discoveries. The trio of
Leo Genovese, Demian Cabaud, and Marcos Cavaleiro take such an unbridled
approach to music making on their new recording, Estrellero.
Argentinean pianist Leo Genovese met his fellow countryman, bassist
Demian Cabaud, while they both attended the Berklee College of Music
in Boston. Their twenty-year friendship has never diminished, even as Cabaud
settled in Porto, Portugal. It was in Portugal, that the duo met drummer
Marcos Cavaleiro, a perfect musical match to Genovese and Cabaud.
Genovese and Cabaud were introduced to the idea of the estrellero by an
Argentinean gaucho friend, Orlando Vera Cruz. An estrellero is a horse that
can never be fully trained and, even when harnessed, continues to pull away,
typically looking up toward the stars. The musicians found this a perfect metaphor
for their musical journey, always being tethered to the rules of music but
trying to look beyond and race ahead.