On May 21, 2018, Oscar Peñas was excited to enter Sear Sound Studio to record his debut suite Almadraba” arranged and composed for an eight-piece ensemble. Little did Penas know about when he asked legendary bassist Ron Carter who responded enchanted to record his composition on six tracks. The official launch date for the album is on February 25, 2022, which was produced by Jason Olaine and engineered by Grammy awardee Jeremy Loucas.
Oscar Peñas perform with a not flashy precise finger-picking technic, giving his fellow band members space shows all his creativity skills on guitar. Also featured on Almadraba are fellow Spaniard, keyboardist Marta Sanchez; bassist Pablo Aslan; (on the tracks where Ron Carter didn't play); percussionist and world rhythm expert Richie Barshay; and the Harlem Quartet, the Grammy-winning string four-some comprised by violinists Ilmar Gavilán, and Melissa White; violist Jaime Amador; and cellist Jody Redhage-Ferber.
Almadraba is the fifth album by Peñas “…whose gem-playing remains a study in restrain and depth, and whose training began with classical studies and later progressed to jazz….” by Ashley Kahn (liner notes).
Peñas' novel suite was inspired by Cadiz's unknown ancient fishing method in the South of Spain. Each of the suite’s movements describes the different steps of the almadraba fishing method, all of them titled after those. Almadraba’s premiere at the Brooklyn Academy of Music Next Wave Festival from October 3—6, 2018. Audiences experienced the stage representation of the fishing process mirrored a set of dramatic photos—some in black-and-white, others in washed-out color—projected on a gigantic screen behind the musicians in sync with the music. The multimedia effect transformed the presentation into something of a multi-sensory knowledge. Peñas’ innovative composition received acceptance with endless ovations, thrilling audiences’ celebrations, of great excitement.
Its second presentation in Feb. 2019 got the piece a fantastic concert review by Phillip Lutz - Downbeat Magazine; "Even when the bandleader brought out his nylon-string guitar and invoked, if obliquely, the flamenco sounds of his native land—as he did to great effect in the closing piece, “Bulería de la Almadraba,” the most animated offering of the night—he demonstrated an abundance of reserve. For all its artistry, Peñas’ work retained considerable humility and remained no less impactful because of it.”
A musical spark can come from many sources—a special person, a certain poem, a particular place. On the album Almadraba, the Catalonian guitarist and composer Oscar Peñas draws inspiration from a fishing tradition that has been part of Andalucian culture for thousands of years. Filled with Iberian, Classical and flamenco flavors, and with the sensitive support of keyboards, percussion, and strings, Peñas’s twelve-track suite is a deeply evocative celebration of man and nature in struggle and harmony.
“’Almadraba’ is an Arabic name,” Peñas explains. “It’s a sustainable fishing method first practiced by the Phoenicians and brought to Andalusian Spain about 2000 years ago. It’s still in practice today in fact on the coast of Cádiz. Schools of bluefin tuna travel from the North Sea to the warmer waters of the Mediterranean to spawn. On the first full moon in May the fishermen there set up this labyrinth of nets to force the fish into a center area and then pull them out, very dramatically, and take only the biggest ones. The rest are returned to the sea.”
Dramatically? That’s an understatement. This is no Sunday outing with a fishing pole and line. One must witness the dangerous, sea-soaked, slippery scene to grasp the battle that is the Almadraba—the sheer physicality of it all, as fishermen use ropes and big metal hooks, hands and muscle, to lift the largest of the tuna up off a bed of entangled nets, over the wooden gunwales and onto the boat’s broad decks. The fish they choose are two to three feet longer than a man is tall, and weigh twice as much. The rope-and-pulley system used today—hanging from masts planted firmly into the boat’s hull—is the same as what’s been in play for centuries. The fish’s final, fitful attempts at freedom have snapped many a pulley, maiming—or taking the life of—many fishermen. The red-tinted seafood and dark blue-green waters swirl together: a colorful backdrop to a scene that caught Peñas’s eye.
Almadraba is the fifth album by the 48-year old artist whose gem-like guitar-playing remains a study in restraint and depth, and whose training began with classical studies and later progressed to jazz. The album also stands as a creative breakthrough, realizing years of artistic progress and promise. The music on it sparkles softly, speaking with a delicate lyricism that both still the soul and resonates with the feel of ageless melodies. All that needed to happen was for someone to hear and record them. Now Peñas has done that.
Almadraba—like Peña’s critically acclaimed albums before it (2003’s Astronautus, 2005’s The Return of Astronautus, 2011’s From Now On, and 2014’s Music of Departures and Returns)—benefits from a carefully selected group of improvising musicians, including master bassists Ron Carter. Also featured on Almadraba are: fellow Spaniard, keyboardist Marta Sánchez; bassist Pablo Aslan; percussionist and world-rhythm expert Richie Barshay; and The Harlem Quartet, the Grammy-winning string foursome comprised of violinists Ilmar Gavilán and Melissa White, violist Jaime Amador, and cellist Jody Redhage-Farber.
That Peñas continues to recruit talent of this caliber to his recording projects, utilizing their musicality and nuance to the degree that he does on Almadraba, speaks highly of his skill as a composer. The dozen pieces on the album reveal an emotional range that deepens in reach and meaning after each listening, telling the story of the almadraberos—“the brave fishermen who risk their lives to catch the tuna,” says Peñas, who adds that “the movements of the suite have been named after the different phases of this tradition,” as he explains.
“It opens with ‘Traveling Through Water’—the most song-oriented part of the suite. If it had lyrics I think it could be a pop song, and next, there’s ‘Calamento’: those are the nets they set up in a labyrinth-like pattern.” Two tunes follow capturing the beauty of the swift, sea-bound journey of the fishermen to the fish: ‘Almadraba’s Waltz’, very lively and hopeful, and ‘Habanera de la Almadraba’, which flows with the motion of the sea, waves of tension and release.
“Then there’s ‘La Levantà’, the most vigorous part of the suite, when the biggest fish are pulled up by hand, the fish thrashing their tails in despair. The smaller ones are released—‘La Bajà’—which to me has a dreamy, Debussy-like feel, although any similarity was not intentional. On land, the big tunas are filleted for auction: ‘El Ronqueo’ is meant to evoke the sound of the knives on the fish bones. This tune, and the closing piece of the suite, ‘Bulería de la Almadraba’, are the most Spanish-flaired in terms of tempo, energy, cadences and rhythm—a tribute to the place where this all takes place in southern Spain.”
The suite closes with the deceptively mood-painting of the guitar-and-bass duet ‘Ballad of the Fishermen’. The bonus tracks of the digital version of the album offer the harmonies and Phrygian cadences of ‘South’ (so we know where we are, in Andalucia) and ‘Oh Maguro’, light-hearted in spirit, inspired in part by the irony that many of the tuna caught in Spain will fetch a high prices and end up in sushi restaurants in Japan.
For Peñas, Almadraba serves as a point of musical arrival and personal satisfaction. “This work is also very close to me because I feel I finally blended the two musical worlds I have been exploring most of my life—worlds that are at times harmonious and at times antagonistic: classical music and jazz. Not just that either—on this album I filtered both genres through the cadences and rhythms of my native Spain— and other flavors very dear to me, like the habanera.”
In fact there’s a kaleidoscope of musical ideas swirling through Almadraba—Iberian and Afro-Cuban, Classical and bebop—but it takes a sharp ear to catch the distinct threads, but that defeats the purpose. True to Peñas’s word, the music flows effortlessly and naturally. Yet one need only consider a few standout moments—the hushed focus of Peñas’s guitar line on the album opener; the cascading, back-and-forth of guitar and string quartet on the final track—to realize how much is truly happening, and why he rightfully feels a sense of pride in what he achieved.
From the fishermen of Cadiz, who have been casting their nets into the Mediterranean for generations, came the inspiration. On Almadraba, Peñas has created music that should endure as long. —Ashley Kahn, May 2021