The best songs are those that provide messages that reach beyond the genre into which they are born. There are lyrics that can move people deeply, even when the composer and listener are separated by oceans.
Blades s interest in tango music led him to reach out to his long time friend and collaborator Carlos Franzetti. Both were intimately involved in the New York Latin jazz and salsa scenes of the late 1970s and early 1980s and they befriended each other while working on a number of recordings, including the massive releases of Siembra (1978) and Maestra Vida (1980) and the music for the films Beat Street (1984) and Q&A (1990).
The initial idea for a collaboration using tango material was proposed nearly a decade ago but plans were delayed while Blades served as the Minister of Tourism for his native Panama from 2004 to 2009. Blades never forgot the idea and he began to hint at a possible tango project with Franzetti while touring Latin America shortly after his term ended.
Blades s hints led to an invitation from Gustavo Mozi for the two to close the World Tango Festival in Buenos Aires during the summer of 2010. The Festival gave Blades and Franzetti the perfect opportunity to tackle the project.
Franzetti began by arranging five of Blades s compositions for their performance: Pablo Pueblo, Ligia Elena, Ella, Paula C and Pedro Navaja. At the Festival, Blades and Franzetti were accompanied by the fantastic Leopoldo Federico Orchestra, which also recorded the pieces shortly thereafter. Once they returned to New York, Blades and Franzetti worked on arranging another six compositions, which were recorded with a tango quintet, with the strings and woodwinds recorded later in Prague.
Arranging Blades s classic salsa material proved to be quite a difficult task. The two wanted to make sure they did justice to both the original salsa renditions and the tango tradition, so they had to make a number of artistic choices while creating their new arrangements. For example, salsa has a strict continuous beat while tango does not, tango being more attuned to classical music and utilizing a more rhapsodic feel. So Blades chose his more melodic songs for the project to help bridge the gap between genres more easily. Franzetti even utilized some Afro-Cuban rhythmic ideas on some of the compositions to really make the fusion unique.
The one thing that made the transition work especially well was that Blades s lyrics could work in any genre but were especially well suited for tango, as his message and stories could be reflected on any street in the barrios of Spanish Harlem or those of Buenos Aires. The lyrics also helped to guide the arrangements, as Franzetti tried to echo sentiment and action within the moving parts of the music, amplifying Blades s extraordinary storytelling abilities.