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Breathe

YU SA

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Album Review

Think of Cuba, and the first thing that comes to mind is salsa. Great artists like Celia Cruz, Beny Moré, Orquesta Aragón, Machito, la Sonora Matancera, Mongo Santamaria and los Van Van. Great rhythms like son, cha-cha, guaracha, mambo, danzón and guaguancó — all the Afro-Cuban rhythms that the New Yorkers at Fania Records started calling salsa in the '70s. But on her second album, Breathe, Yusa reminds us that a female vocalist from Cuba doesn't necessarily have to be a salsera in the traditional Celia Cruz/Jacqueline Castellanos/Albita/Caridad Cuervo sense. What transpires on this risk-taking CD is best described as a combination of Spanish lyrics (with occasional detours into English or French), Afro-Brazilian and Afro-Cuban sensibilities, R&B and a singer/songwriter aesthetic; Yusa gets some inspiration from Brazilian vocalists like Gal Costa, Rosa Passos and Maria Bethania (although she doesn't sing in Portuguese on this album), as well as from English-speaking singer/songwriters such as Joni Mitchell and Joan Armatrading. Yusa is definitely jazz-influenced, but not in a hard-swinging, aggressive way; she favors a jazzy subtlety on pensive, relaxed offerings like "El Fantasma del Marino," "La Espera," "Del Miedo" and "Una Vaca y Una Foca." The use of subtlety and restraint is something she has in common with Mitchell as well as Costa, Passos and Bethania — and while "Descarga Track: Canda'o Cerra'o" has a strong Afro-Cuban flavor, Breathe owes just as much (if not more) to the Brazilian samba rhythm. Yusa, for the most part, is not a shouter or a belter, but she is funky in an understated way — and she has no problem getting her emotional points across on this memorable sophomore effort.

Customer Reviews

Yusa all over the map

Like most of her fans in the U.S, I was introduced to Yusa through National Public Radio. The album featured was Haiku, a nearly perfect recording from beginning to end. Breathe, however is a mixed bag. TOO mixed, literally -- where jazz, rap, salsa and heavy metal intersect in jarring and uncomfortable ways. Moreover, there are about 40 tunes interspersed within the 14 tracks. Many of the songs are a melodic hodgepodge, beautiful in spots but hard to pin down.

So why does the album still work? Because, when Yusa is good, she's great! I recommend four tracks on Breathe:
"Una Vaca y una Foca," "Sube," "Noticia" and "Canada'o Cerra'o." It's a long journey to reach "Noticia," the next to last track -- but the guitar and her vocals are thrilling here, and worth the wait!

Biography

Genre: Baladas y Boleros

Years Active: '00s

Born and raised in the Buena Vista area, now known as Playa, Yusa split her time between her love of music and her love of the sea. Influenced by her father, who was a sailor, Yusa started playing guitar at a young age, moving on to piano and bass lessons. While attending the Amadeo Roldan Conservatory with contemporaries such as Roberto Carcasses, Yusa would often be found performing in school corridors. From there she joined an improvisational jazz quintet called Quasi-Jazz. The group often performed...
Full Bio
Breathe, YU SA
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