"Ana Carla Maza's Bahía is a homage to a district in Havana that throbs with a multiplicity of musical styles - son, jazz, samba, bossa nova are a few of them - which she carries into her own compositional palate. Maza also adds influences from her classical cello studies in France to this musical heritage. Bahía is a tribute to the way in which these musics overlay one another to create newly balanced experiences each time ... Her Chilean father, Carlos Maza, is a pianist, her Cuban mother, Mirza Sierra, a guitarist - and so it's not surprising that several musical influences run through Bahía. What makes this album (...) special is its utter directness ... We hear not only classical references (there is a tiny bit of Bach elsewhere on the album), but flamenco, tango (there's an homage to Astor Piazzolla, with the cello imitating the accordion) and French chanson ('A Tomar Café' is a lovely example)".