MUSIC
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Carlos Aguirre's solo piano work released in 2006, featuring many of his classic and popular songs, is now available in a long-awaited analog vinyl edition in a completely limited edition.
The album contains 13 pieces that depict rich mental landscapes spreading from the keyboard with beautiful melodies and deep reverberations. This is an important work that is indispensable to the career of Carlos Aguirre, who is now entering his mature period as a musician.
The album includes three masterpieces under the name Carlos Aguirre Grupo, "Crema" (2000), "Rojo" (2004), and "Violator" (2008); "Orijânia" (2012) and "La Musica del Agua - Water Music" (2006) under his solo name; "Karma" (2005) under his trio name; and the five-member group Carlos Aguirre is reaching maturity as a musician, breaking new ground with each album, from "Ba Ciendo Tiempo" (2010) with his guitar quintet, to "La Música del Agua - Water Music" (2012), "Karma" (2005) as a trio, and even "Ba Ciendo Tiempo" (2010) with his guitar quintet. The album "Caminos" was released in 2006, and is a solo piano album that Carlos Aguirre has wanted to make since he was 17 years old when he started composing music.
The album contains many masterpieces that project the vibrancy of life, magnificent natural scenery, and childhood memories, opening with "Pampa" (1), which many people remember as the first song Carlos always played on his first Japan tour in 2011 (in other words, the first song he played in Japan), followed by the serene "Um The simple melody of "Um pueblo de paso" (2) evokes nostalgia, while "Romanza" (3) strikes the heart with its vital touch and romantic phrasing. After the middle part of the concert, which features Carlos' unique fusion of modern harmonies and folklore rhythms on the piano, the audience was treated to the simple and moving small piece "Mai" (9), "Zamba para no morir" (11), an Aguirre-style interpretation of a famous Argentine samba song (Zamba), and "Mai" (12), a piece that was performed to great acclaim during a concert tour in Japan. The overwhelming performance of "Milonga gris" (⑫), which received a huge ovation at a concert in Japan, is a masterpiece that has been covered by many artists. The album ends with "Canción de cuna costera" (⑬), a soothing lullaby like the shimmering sunset on the surface of the magnificent Paraná River, leaving an emotional aftertaste like the end roll of a movie.