Recorded at two separate sessions on September 24 and 25, 1990, Two of Swords finds
Claudio Roditi leading two separate groups. One of them, which he calls a "Brazilian Quintet," employs trombonist
Jay Ashby, pianist
Edward Simon, bassist
Nilson Matta and drummer
Duduka Da Fonseca -- the other, which he calls a "Jazz Quartet," includes pianist
Danílo Perez, bassist
David Finck and drummer
Akira Tana. Both groups serve
Roditi well, and both of them are hard bop-oriented. The main difference between the two, apart from personnel, is the fact that "the Brazilian Quintet" is more overtly Brazilian-influenced. "The Brazilian Quintet" is still playing hard bop, but it's hard bop that is more consistently mindful of the samba beat that
Roditi was surrounded by growing up in Rio de Janeiro. While "the Brazilian Quintet" sticks to
Roditi's own compositions, "the Jazz Quartet" embraces
Roditi originals as well as "Secret Love,"
Sonny Rollins' "Airegin" and
Dizzy Gillespie's "Con Alma" (which is "the Jazz Quartet"'s most Latin-influenced offering). Two of Swords won't win any awards for being cutting-edge or groundbreaking, but for bop played with plenty of soul and conviction, you can't go wrong with this CD. ~ Alex Henderson