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DIEGO PINERA 4+4 OCTET

ROMANIAN DANCE

"Diese … Einspielung ist mit ihrem immer wieder überraschenden Detailreichtum der bisherige Höhepunkt von Pineras Diskografie."

~ Reinhold Unger, Jazzpodium (2026)

ROMANIAN DANCE (March 18 2026) is the debut album of the Diego Piñera 4+4 Octet, a project born from a long-standing artistic vision: to bring composed and improvised music into a shared space where both can unfold with equal intensity. By combining a jazz quartet with a string quartet, the ensemble opens up an expanded sound world – rich in color, texture, and emotional depth – where structure and freedom exist side by side.

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About the album

At the heart of the album lies an ongoing dialogue with the work of Béla Bartók. Rather than paying tribute in a historical sense, Piñera approaches Bartók as a living influence. ROMANIAN DANCE features new arrangements of Bartók’s Romanian folk dances and selected string quartet movements, alongside reimagined works by Alexander Borodin and five original compositions. Bartók’s fascination with folk traditions, rhythmic complexity, and harmonic experimentation resonates deeply with Piñera’s own musical language, shaped by his Afro-Uruguayan roots and a lifelong engagement with trans-cultural rhythms.

"… ein Album, das nicht laut nach Aufmerksamkeit verlangt, sondern sie sich durch Substanz verdient. Persönlich, konzentriert und von großer innerer Geschlossenheit."

~ Jacek Brun, jazz-fun (2026)

"… Der gebürtige Uruguayer leitet aus unterschiedlichen Sprachen, Kulturen, Traditionen und Musikauffassungen eine Metasprache ab, die zwar all diese Idiome vereint und sich dennoch leichtfüßig über ihre Gesamtheit hinwegsetzt…"

~ Wolf Kampmann, Jazzthing (2026)

In addition to Latin American influences, Piñera weaves in folkloric elements from other regions, particularly Eastern Europe. His recent immersion in Bulgarian rhythmic traditions further informs the album’s exploration of asymmetrical meters and polyrhythms, creating subtle bridges between distant musical cultures. These rhythmic and melodic intersections give the music its distinctive pulse – grounded, open, and constantly in motion.

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Through intensive rehearsal and close collaboration, the octet has developed a natural balance between interpretation and improvisation. Classical musicians and jazz players meet on equal footing, listening closely and shaping the music together in real time. This shared responsibility gives the album its organic flow and emotional immediacy.

The music of ROMANIAN DANCE is also deeply personal. Some of its most powerful moments emerged during a period of serious illness, when Piñera continued composing from a hospital bed. This experience lends the album a quiet intensity – resilient, vulnerable, and deeply human – without ever becoming inward-looking.
 

ROMANIAN DANCE is a statement of connection: between traditions, cultures, and musical practices often kept apart. It is not an experiment, but a living, breathing form – rooted in history, shaped by the present, and open to what may emerge next.

The Octet

„Besonders spannend war es, den Klang zweier unterschiedlicher Welten zu erkunden, die auf natürliche Weise miteinander verschmelzen.“

~ Igor Osypov

„Die Arbeit mit dem Streichquartett ist für mich als Jazzmusiker wunderbar herausfordernd … unheimlich inspirierend."

~ Peter Ehwald

“‘Romanian Dance’ seems like the modern continuation of this genre. Most beautiful fusion of jazz and classical music.”

~ Marcel Krömker

“For me as a classical musician, it was all about a challenge to share with a jazz quartet. I think the result is a masterpiece.”

~ Joaquín León Fernández

TRACKLISTING:
01. Romanian Dance
02. Cielo Gris
03. Bartók 2
04. Through Hell
05. Sueño Herido
06. Mi Cosmos Reloaded
07. Bartók 3
08. Front Office
09. Bartók 1
10. Polovtsian Dances Reloaded
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©2024  Diego Pinera

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