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Review: Arturo Sandoval elevates an evening of classical, jazz

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We’re blessed here in L.A. Some of the most notable Latin musicians in the world call this city home: Spanish Harlem Orchestra leader Oscar Hernández, bossa nova pioneer Sergio Mendes and, more recently, Cuban trumpet player and composer Arturo Sandoval.

Sandoval’s presence brought some much-needed gravitas to a performance of classical and jazz fare by the Muse/ique orchestra Friday at Caltech’s outdoor Beckman Mall in Pasadena.

Everything has already been said about Sandoval’s superb phrasing and virtuoso technique. A former member of Cuban supergroup Irakere and a protégé of Dizzy Gillespie, he moves comfortably across genres and instruments — using the trumpet to generate an apocalyptic range of sounds, alternately majestic, humorous and romantic.

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On Friday, he was the exuberant soloist on Hummel’s Trumpet Concerto, then returned at the end of the program with a punchy “Night in Tunisia.”

He told the colorful story of meeting Gillespie in 1977 — when Sandoval was a young musician living in Havana — before performing the title track of his new album, “Dear Diz (Every Day I Think of You).” A tribute to maestro Dizzy, this was a nocturnal number anchored on upright bass, keyboards and Sandoval’s singing — the most soulful moment of the evening.

Unfortunately, the frame for these musical gems was less than ideal. Inviting a performer of Sandoval’s caliber and then having him play just a handful of numbers was a baffling decision. And his exquisite musicality deserved a better setting that the clinking of wine glasses and the chattering of picnicking patrons.

The pieces without Sandoval were a mixed bag. A misguided arrangement of Astor Piazzolla’s “Fuga y Misterio” sounded like Henry Mancini movie music and captured none of the Argentine composer’s morbid fatalism. Gershwin’s “Promenade,” on the other hand, was elegant and delightful.

calendar@latimes.com

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