Couverture de Episode 40. Romero Lubambo (Guitar) - 'Alone Together'

Episode 40. Romero Lubambo (Guitar) - 'Alone Together'

Episode 40. Romero Lubambo (Guitar) - 'Alone Together'

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Geoff has travelled to Ronnie Scott’s jazz club in London’s Soho district to meet with the legendary Brazilian jazz guitarist Romero Lubambo.

In a candid interview between his run of shows with Dianne Reeves, Romero contemplates what changes when there’s no band behind you: you become the time, the bass, the harmony, the dynamics, and the safety net, all while keeping the song clear and the singer supported.

We dig into the craft of playing slowly through the lens of Antônio Carlos Jobim, where silence becomes part of the arrangement and every note has consequences. Romero shares how his Brazilian upbringing shaped his ears, how teenage dance gigs forced him to learn many styles fast, and how classical guitar technique helped him refine hand position and tone. If you’re into jazz guitar, bossa nova, chord melody, comping, and building a beautiful sound, you’ll find plenty to steal for your own practice.

Romero also talks about learning jazz standards from recordings, transcribing Wes Montgomery, avoiding “boxy” scale habits, and what it means to develop a personal musical identity in an age of endless online information. He treats us to an impromptu improvisation of the 1930s standard ‘Alone Together’…accompanied by the Quartet app of course.

Along the way we hear stories of playing with legends like Jobim, Herbie Hancock, Pat Metheny and the American cellist Yo-Yo Ma, and the mindset shift he got from producer George Duke: you’re hired to be yourself.

If you enjoyed this conversation, subscribe for more, share it with a musician friend, and leave a review so more jazz players can find the show.

Presenter: Geoff Gascoyne
Series Producer: Paul Sissons
Production Manager: Martin Sissons
The Quartet Jazz Standards Podcast is a UK Music Apps production.

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