Showing posts with label Mongo Santamaria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mongo Santamaria. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 12, 2019

Hilton Ruiz - Strut

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:24
Size: 113,6 MB
Art: Front

( 6:19)  1. The SideWinder
(10:46)  2. Goin'Back To New Orleans
( 4:57)  3. Bluz
( 4:19)  4. Aged In Soul
( 8:07)  5. All My Love Is Yours
( 5:55)  6. Soca Serenade
( 2:34)  7. Why Don't You Steal My B
( 6:24)  8. Lush Life

Pianist Hilton Ruiz mixes together elements of salsa, r&b, funk and jazz but, instead of his music becoming some type of hybrid, the result is a very danceable variety of jazz that is both accessible and challenging. Ruiz, whose main influence is McCoy Tyner, gathered together a very interesting assortment of players for Strut. Trumpeter Lew Soloff contributes some high notes and leads the horn riffing, trombonist Dick Griffin's extroverted trombone is witty in its short spots, Sam Rivers (mostly on tenor) and percussionist Mongo Santamaria add their sounds to the brew and guitarist Rodney Jones is second only to Ruiz in taking solo honors. 

It is particularly rewarding to hear a Latin remake of "The Sidewinder" and many of the other good-natured melodies are catchy. Strut should be able to win over both jazz fans and those listeners who claim to not understand or be able to appreciative creative music. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/strut-mw0000203520

Personnel:  Piano – Hilton Ruiz; Bass – Rodney Jones; Congas – Mongo Santamaria; Drums – Robby Ameen, Steve Berrios; Electric Bass – Francisco Centeno; Guitar – Rodney Jones; Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Sam Rivers; Timbales, Percussion – Robby Ameen, Steve Berrios; Trombone – Dick Griffin; Trumpet – Lew Soloff

Strut

Monday, April 22, 2019

Cal Tjader, Willie Bobo, Mongo Santamaria - Latino!

Styles: Latin Jazz, World Fusion
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 73:31
Size: 171,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:49)  1. Manila
(3:30)  2. Key Largo
(6:43)  3. Tumbao
(3:04)  4. Bludan
(3:24)  5. Chispita
(3:42)  6. September Song
(3:32)  7. Cal's Pals
(3:26)  8. Para Ti
(4:37)  9. Mamblues
(6:32) 10. Afro Blue
(6:29) 11. Cuban Fantasy
(5:56) 12. Rezo
(4:20) 13. Mambo Terrifico
(8:34) 14. A Night In Tunisia
(4:45) 15. The Continental

Vibraphonist Cal Tjader is heard leading five different groups throughout this set, but the identities of the flutists, bassists, and pianists are less important than knowing that Tjader, Willie Bobo (on drums and timbales), and the great conga player Mongo Santamaria are on every selection. The music really cooks, with torrid percussion, inspired ensembles, and occasional solos from the sidemen (which sometimes include pianists Lonnie Hewitt or Vince Guaraldi, bassist Al McKibbon, and flutist Paul Horn). Highlights include Latinized versions of "Key Largo" and "September Song," "Night in Tunisia," "The Continental," and a definitive version of Santamaria's "Afro Blue." This is Latin jazz at its finest. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/latino-con-cal-tjader-mw0000626426

Personnel:  Vibraphone – Cal Tjader; Backing Band – The Eddie Cano Big Band; Bass – Al McKibbon, Eddie Coleman , Victor Venegas; Congas – Mongo Santamaria; Drums, Timbales – Willie Bobo; Featuring – Al McKibbon, Eddie Cano, José "Chombo" Silva , Lonnie Hewitt, Mongo Santamaria, Paul Horn, Vince Guaraldi, Willie Bobo; Flute – José Lozano, Paul Horn, Rolando Lozano; Flute, Alto Saxophone – Modesto Briseno ; Piano – Eddie Cano, Lonnie Hewitt, Vince Guaraldi Remastered By – Phil De Lancie; Tenor Saxophone – José "Chombo" Silva; Trumpet – Tony Terran 

Latino!

Wednesday, October 31, 2018

Cal Tjader - Concerts In The Sun

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 1960
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:52
Size: 127,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:11)  1. Love For Sale
(4:39)  2. Goodbye
(6:00)  3. Raccoon Straits
(7:14)  4. Walkin With Wally
(5:09)  5. My Romance
(5:28)  6. Sigmund Sten Groove
(4:26)  7. Cubano Chant
(5:03)  8. Afro Blue
(5:43)  9. Tumbao
(4:54) 10. Day In, Day Out

Concerts in the Sun languished in the vaults for 42 years, but it's now finally available on CD. The recording finds Cal Tjader in a state of transition between the West Coast cool jazz he helmed with Dave Brubeck and a full-blown commitment to integrating Afro-Cuban rhythms into jazz. Culled from two concerts, one in Honolulu and the other in San Francisco, the first half features well-mannered standards and a distinct lack of perspiration; unfortunately, the five song routine seems overly rehearsed and detached. Only in the second half, which features the dense polyrhythms of Willie Bobo and Mongo Santamaria, does the band really swing into gear. (Jazz historians will note the appearance of “Afro Blue,” a few years before Coltrane’s famous version.) However, despite the enthusiasm of the band, at this point Tjader wasn’t yet able to fully fuse the foreign rhythms and jazz concept into a convincing whole, so they come off like a bunch of guys who showed up at a black tie dinner wearing sombreros. The problem with much of Tjader’s music is that Tjader himself is frequently the least interesting thing about it; and only later, with classics like Black Orchid, was he able to create a distinctive and enjoyable Latin jazz hybrid. Of course Tjader fans will want to pick this up, but the mildly curious should explore the excellent Monterey concerts first. ~ David Rickert https://www.allaboutjazz.com/concerts-in-the-sun-cal-tjader-fantasy-jazz-review-by-david-rickert.php

Personnel: Cal Tjader-vibes; Lonnie Hewitt-piano; Victor Venegas, Eddie Coleman-bass; Willie Bobo-drums; Mongo Santamaria-congas, bongos.

Concerts In The Sun

Thursday, October 25, 2018

Cal Tjader - Sentimental Moods

Styles: Vibraphone Jazz
Year: 1958
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:53
Size: 170,5 MB
Art: Front

(2:36)  1. I Should Care
(2:39)  2. Spring Is Here
(2:59)  3. Time Was
(3:17)  4. Star Eyes
(3:16)  5. Stella By Starlight
(4:29)  6. Alone Together
(2:20)  7. Ode To A Beat Generation
(2:39)  8. Skylark
(3:10)  9. Martha
(4:01) 10. Quizas, Quizas, Quizas
(3:25) 11. Running Out
(2:28) 12. Racoon Strait
(3:41) 13. The Last Luff
(4:40) 14. Sigmund Stern Groove
(1:38) 15. Coit Tower
(6:03) 16. Triple T Blues
(4:23) 17. Union Square
(3:47) 18. Skyline Waltz
(3:43) 19. Viva Cepeda
(7:30) 20. The Grant Avenue Suite

Fantasy Records is to be commended for re-releasing so many of their classic Cal Tjader albums in the budget-priced two-for-one CD format, even if Sentimental Moods features one of their odder pairings. The first ten selections are culled from the dreamy mood music album Latin for Lovers (aka Latin for Lovers With Strings), and the final ten are from San Francisco Moods, a lean and mean West Coast jazz ode to his hometown. While these two sessions don't really go together, they do show you the breadth of what Tjader was recording for Fantasy at the time. While the Latin for Lovers selections aren't really Latin jazz (or even "Latin" or "jazz," for that matter), it is superior mood music with fine string arrangements written by Jack Weeks. If all lounge music was this good, the term couldn't be used as an insult. The soloists don't really stretch out at all, but Tjader, pianist Vince Guaraldi, and flutist Paul Horn each make their presence felt on regal, melodic passages. Willie Bobo and Mongo Santamaria are on the session, but unlike their sizzling one-track cameo on the next session's "Viva Cepeda," they are only around to keep strict time. So while the first half of the disc is upscale easy listening, those culled from San Francisco Moods show how underrated Tjader was at mainstream small-group jazz. Tjader starts out the session on piano, but on most tracks his vibraphone skills are given a real chance to shine. Tjader was always a giving group leader and guitarist Eddie Duran and the rest of the quartet are featured prominently. San Francisco Moods is an exhilarating session, one that veers from gritty, hard-swinging romps to uptown "chamber jazz" and back again without a hitch. Cal Tjader had such great success with Latin jazz that listeners and critics have tended to forget that he really was a major part of the cool West Coast jazz scene and that he recorded all kinds of music throughout his career. This CD reissue is a must-have for Cal Tjader fans and one that reminds people how far-reaching the vibraphonist's mainstream musical talent really was. ~ Nick Dedina https://www.allmusic.com/album/sentimental-moods-mw0000646495

Personnel includes: Cal Tjader (vibraphone); Paul Horn, Vince Guaraldi, Al McKibbon, Mongo Santamaria, Willie Bobo, Boris Blinder, Harry Moulin, Frances Wiener, Eugene Winkler, Eddie Duran, John Mosher, Jack Weeks, John Markham. Johnny Horn, Paul Horn (flute); Vince Guaraldi (piano); Mongo Santamaria, Cal Tjader (piano, vibraphone); Eddie Duran (guitar); Franz Wiener, Frances Wiener, Boris Blinder, Harry Moulin, Eugene Winkler John Markham (drums).

Sentimental Moods

Tuesday, October 10, 2017

Mongo Santamaria - Hey! Let's Party

Styles: Latin Jazz
Year: 1966
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 31:11
Size: 75,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:01)  1. Walk On By
(2:52)  2. I Got You (I Feel Good)
(3:27)  3. In the Mood
(4:02)  4. Baila Dance
(2:19)  5. Louie, Louie
(3:47)  6. (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction
(2:53)  7. Hey!
(2:48)  8. Call Me
(2:32)  9. El Bikini
(3:26) 10. Shotgun

Hey! Let's Party represents one of percussionist Mongo Santamaria's first and most engaging plunges into the world of contemporary pop, galvanizing well-known chart smashes with the energy and abandon of Latin soul. It's a simple formula that proved remarkably successful and flexible across a series of likeminded LPs Santamaria approaches texts like "Walk on By" and "I Got You (I Feel Good)" with deep respect and understanding, creating soulful, righteous rhythms that snake in and out of the original melodies with brilliant precision. Even battered warhorses like Glenn Miller's "In the Mood" breathe new life, proving Santamaria's uncanny capacity for making the familiar funky. ~ Jason Ankeny https://www.allmusic.com/album/hey!-lets-party-mw0000866762

Personnel:  Alto Saxophone, Baritone Saxophone, Flute – Bobby Capers;  Bass – Victor Venegas;  Drums – Mongo Santamaria;  Piano – Rodger Grant;  Saxophone – Hubert Laws;  Timbales, Drums – Carmello Garcia;  Trumpet – Marty Sheller

Hey! Let's Party

Saturday, September 30, 2017

Mongo Santamaria - Mr. Watermelon Man

Styles: Latin Jazz
Year: 1965
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:00
Size: 95,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:00)  1. La Bamba
(3:19)  2. Fat Back
(4:45)  3. Summertime
(4:49)  4. Manha De Carnaval (Morning Of The Carnival) (From 'Black Orpheus')
(2:42)  5. Jose Outside
(2:36)  6. Coconut Milk
(3:18)  7. Watermelon Man
(3:58)  8. Do It To It
(2:24)  9. Ricky Tick
(2:52) 10. Streak O'Lean
(3:17) 11. Just Say Goodbye
(2:52) 12. From Me To You All

One good hit deserves a remake, so Columbia had Mongo Santamaria redo his breakthrough record "Watermelon Man" on his second LP for the label. Indeed, it is this brighter, better-recorded version that we generally hear on the radio nowadays instead of the Battle original. Even better, though, are "Fatback" and the wildly swinging workout on "La Bamba" that kicks off the album, to which you can imagine the foxy blonde model on the cover dancing the boogaloo. 

Marty Sheller's charging arrangements and trumpet are in the driver's seat of this sports car with the Mongo engine, and Hubert Laws has a ball in his flute and tenor sax solos. Few records embodied the go-go spirit of the '60s as well as this Latin jazz album. 
~ Richard S.Ginell http://www.allmusic.com/album/la-bamba-mw0000866540

Personnel:  Leader, Bongos – Mongo Santamaria;  Alto Saxophone, Baritone Saxophone, Flute – Bobby Capers;  Bass – Victor Venegas;  Flute, Tenor Saxophone – Hubert Laws;  Piano – Rodgers Grant;  Timbales, Drums – Carmello Garcia;  Trumpet – Marty Sheller

Mr. Watermelon Man

Sunday, September 17, 2017

Charlie Palmieri & Latin Music Legends - Mambo Show

Styles: Piano, Latin Jazz
Year: 1990
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:06
Size: 102,4 MB
Art: Front

(6:41)  1. Mambo Show
(5:18)  2. Latin Beat
(5:17)  3. Boogason
(7:11)  4. Si Tu Puedes Bailar
(7:20)  5. Mambo For Henry
(4:15)  6. Barrabas
(7:59)  7. Cristine

The older brother of Eddie Palmieri, Charlie Palmieri was every bit as gifted a pianist as his sibling, very percussive and responsive to rhythm while also flashing florid passages that were clearly the product of a classical education. His piano studies began at seven and he attended the Juilliard School of Music, turning pro at 16. He started the group El Conjunto Pin Pin in 1948, and then played in a series of ensembles including those of Tito Puente, Tito Rodriguez, and Pupi Campo before forming his own Charanga Duboney group in 1958. As music director of the Alegre All Stars while recording for the Alegre label in the 1960s, Palmieri stimulated competition among Latin labels like Tico and Fania, which formed their own all-star bands in response. Like many Latin jazz artists of the time, Palmieri flirted with the popular Latin boogaloo style in the 1960s and made some records for major labels like RCA Victor and Atlantic. He endured a near mental breakdown in 1969, but rebounded to work again for Puente on his El Mambo de Tito Puente television program, and he also found a second career as a historian and teacher of Latin music and history at various New York colleges in the 1970s. Palmieri moved briefly to Puerto Rico from 1980 to 1983, and after suffering a severe heart attack and stroke upon his return to New York, he recovered to lead various Latin combos, including Combo Gigante. One of his last recordings was a galvanizing cameo appearance on Mongo Santamaria's "Mayeya" in 1987 (now on Mongo's Afro Blue: The Picante Collection for Concord Picante), and he appeared in England for the first time in 1988 shortly before his death. Almost all of Palmieri's work is hard to find through domestic channels, but Messidor's A Giant Step is available on CD. ~ Richard S.Ginell http://www.allmusic.com/artist/charlie-palmieri-mn0000212129/biography

Personnel:  Bass – Ray Martinez (7);  Bongos, Cowbell – Johnny Rodriguez;  Congas – Mongo Santamaria;  Piano, Producer – Charlie Palmieri;  Saxophone – Chombo Silva;  Timbales, Percussion – Nicky Marrero;  Trombone – Barry Rogers;  Trumpet – David "Piro" Rodríguez;  Vocals – Adalberto Santiago, Ray De La Paz, Yayo "El Indio" Pequero

Mambo Show

Monday, March 13, 2017

Mongo Santamaria - Mongo's Greatest Hits

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:45
Size: 145.9 MB
Styles: Latin jazz
Year: 1995
Art: Front

[ 3:57] 1. Afro Blue
[ 2:51] 2. Mi Novia
[ 3:04] 3. Linda Guajira
[ 2:43] 4. Pito Pito
[10:39] 5. Mazacote
[ 3:02] 6. Para Ti
[ 2:26] 7. Watermelon Man
[ 5:25] 8. Manteca
[ 3:42] 9. Sabroso
[ 4:05] 10. Conga Pa Gozar
[ 3:25] 11. Federico
[ 4:36] 12. Mi Guaguanco
[ 5:59] 13. Para Ti (Alternate)
[ 7:45] 14. Las Guajiras

This is a excellent single-disc sampler of what Mongo Santamaria was like before "Watermelon Man" catapulted him into the charts. Some of the Fantasy tracks sound like the musicians were just off the boat from Havana, and are a bit primitive in contrast to the brassy Santamaria of the mid- to late '60s, but they have overwhelming charm. The revered "Afro-Blue" can be heard in its original, spooky, stripped-down form, and it would be hard for anyone to resist the voodoo spell that the ten-plus minute "Mazacote" conveys. Besides Santamaria himself, included among the world-class percussionists on this record are Willie Bobo and Armando Peraza. The CD version adds four tracks, including "Watermelon Man" from the Battle/Riverside period and an alternate take of "Para Ti." ~Richard S. Ginnell

Mongo's Greatest Hits

Sunday, May 31, 2015

Mongo Santamaria - Live In The Netherlands

Size: 178,6 MB
Time: 77:13
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2011
Styles: Jazz: Latin Jazz, Afro-Cuban Jazz
Art: Front

01. Untitled ( 8:21)
02. Bonita ( 4:39)
03. Untitled ( 4:37)
04. Amanecer ( 6:37)
05. Para Ti ( 7:51)
06. Afro Blue (12:55)
07. Sofrito ( 9:10)
08. A Mi No Me Enganan (14:34)
09. Mambo Mongo ( 8:25)

A Mongo Santamaria concert is a mesmerizing spectacle for both eyes and ears, and even in his seventies, this seemingly ageless Cuban percussionist/bandleader could energize packed behemoth arenas such as the Hollywood Bowl. A master conguero, Santamaria at his best creates an incantatory spell rooted in Cuban religious rituals, quietly seating himself before his congas and soloing with total command over the rhythmic spaces between the beats while his band pumps out an endless vamp (a potent example on records is the hypnotic "Mazacote" available on Afro-Roots [Prestige]). He has been hugely influential as a leader, running durable bands that combine the traditional charanga with jazz-oriented brass, wind, and piano solos, featuring such future notables as Chick Corea and Hubert Laws. He also reached out into R&B, rock, and electric jazz at times in his long career. No Cuban percussionist, with the possible exception of Santana's Armando Peraza (and let's not count Desi Arnaz!), has reached more listeners than Mongo.

Ramon "Mongo" Santamaria originally took up the violin but then switched to drums before dropping out of school to become a professional musician. A performer at the Tropicana Club in Havana, Mongo traveled to Mexico City with a dance team in 1948 and then moved to New York City in 1950, where he made his American debut with Pérez Prado and spent six years trading percussive barrages with Tito Puente and performing and recording with Cal Tjader (1957-1960). Mongo's first significant recordings in America were made in 1958 for Fantasy; his second Fantasy album, Mongo (1959), contained a composition called "Afro-Blue," which quickly became a Latin jazz standard, taken up by John Coltrane, Dizzy Gillespie, and others.

Santamaria's breakthrough into the mass market may have come as a result of a bad night at a Cuban nightclub in the Bronx in 1962. As the story goes, only three people showed up in the audience, so the musicians held a bull session in which the substitute pianist for the gig, Herbie Hancock, demonstrated his new blues tune, "Watermelon Man." Everyone gradually joined in, the number became a part of Mongo's repertoire, and when producer Orrin Keepnews heard it, he rushed the band into a studio and recorded a single that leaped to the number ten slot on the pop charts in 1963.

The success of Santamaria's cross-pollination of jazz, R&B, and Latin music on "Watermelon Man" and a string of Battle and Riverside albums led to a high-profile contract with Columbia that resulted in a wave of hot, danceable albums between 1965 and 1970. With a brighter, brassy sound propelled by trumpeter Marty Sheller's driving charts, often covering hits of the day, the Santamaria band perfectly reflected the mood of the go-go '60s, and Mongo continued to mix genres into the '70s. Santamaria then returned to his Afro-Cuban base, recording for Vaya in the early '70s, teaming with Gillespie and Toots Thielemans for a live gig at Montreux for Pablo in 1980, recording several albums for Concord Picante (1987-1990), a sole effort for Chesky in 1993 and a return to the Fantasy fold via its Milestone subsidiary in 1995. He died on February 1, 2003, at Baptist Hospital in Miami, following a stroke. ~by Richard S. Ginell

Live In The Netherlands

Monday, April 6, 2015

Various - The Colors Of Latin Jazz: From Samba To Bomba!

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:40
Size: 143.5 MB
Styles: Latin rhythms, Samba, Afro-Cuban jazz
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[5:00] 1. Claudio Roditi - Manhattan Style
[3:10] 2. Tito Puente - Mambo King
[4:45] 3. Poncho Sanchez - Papa Gato
[5:12] 4. Mongo Santamaria - Soca Mi Nice
[4:49] 5. Manfredo Fest - Guararapes
[5:04] 6. Pete Escovedo - Like A Volcano
[5:16] 7. Cal Tjader - Linda Chicana
[4:15] 8. Hendrik Meurkens - Sambahia
[8:19] 9. Caribbean Jazz Project - Charanga Si, Si
[4:02] 10. Monty Alexander - Reggae-Later
[4:53] 11. Poncho Sanchez - La Familia
[3:50] 12. Tania Maria - Sangria
[3:59] 13. Ray Barretto - Bomba-Riquen

As the fourth release in the Colors of Latin Jazz series, From Samba to Bomba! will appeal to the Latin jazz connoisseur because of its exciting array of compositions that feature the diverse rhythms of a variety of Latin cultures. From the Brazilian samba to the Puerto Rican bomba -- and a number of styles in between, including the ChaChaCha, mambo, soca, charanga, maracatu, and more -- this CD includes the "Mambo King" himself, Tito Puento, playing his hit "Mambo King" from the award-winning Mambo of the Times album issued on Concord Picante. He is the full-on mambo master on this ballroom dance of Cuban origin that gained greater notoriety when it was featured in the movie Mambo Kings. Puento's work on this composition rivals much of his work of the '50s and early '60s in what critics have hailed as his most imaginative Latin musical period, a period that spawned "Dancemania" and "Tambo." The former featured "Mambo Gozon," a volcanic display of his greatness and mastery of the mambo but "Mambo King" encompasses all the greatness of those years and more! The Brazilian rush is realized "Manhattan Style" as Trio Da Paz kicks off this CD with special guests JoAnne Brackeen and Claudio Roditi, an energetic composition issued originally on Brasil From the Inside. Tania Maria lends her breezy scats on "Sangria." A very special Dutch-German favorite adds his innovative global mix to the Brazilian samba with brilliant jazz harmonica played by none other than the exciting Hendrik Muerkens on his "Sambahia." Originally issued on Sambahia by Concord Picante, Hendrik plays with exceptional finesse on an instrument not found often in jazz ensembles. It's a very refreshing blend of harmonic pleasures! Monty Alexander's Ivory & Steel presents the excitement of reggae on "Reggae-Later" from his popular Jamboree. His mastery of this popular music of Jamaican origin that combines his native styles with elements of rock and soul is performed to reggae perfection with Alexander's very hip piano bop stylings accompanied by steel pans and hand drums. This track is a great jam. Ray Barretto, the highly inventive conguero and percussionist, is amazing as he fuels the bomba "Bomba-Riquen." Poncho Sanchez is ablaze on "La Familia" and continues to work his magic on one of the best solos on the CD even though he is generous about sharing the solo limelight. The popular soca played richly by Mongo Santamaria on "Soca Me Nice" and the Afro-Cuban charanga is well imagined by Dave Samuels on "Charanga, Si, Si" with Dave Valentin. They impose no restrictions on your imagination with the sonority of their uncommon Latin flavors. Originally issued on New Horizons, the pair work The Colors of Latin Jazz into an exciting musical palette that is as beautifully vibrant as the rhythms they represent. This exciting CD is a Latin jazz collector's dream. ~Paula Edelstein

The Colors Of Latin Jazz: From Samba To Bomba!

Tuesday, March 17, 2015

Various - Cha Cha Party

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:59
Size: 132.7 MB
Styles: Afro-Cuban jazz, Latin rhythms
Year: 2001
Art: Front

[4:17] 1. Poncho Sanchez - Bodacious Q
[5:23] 2. Mongo Santamaria - Day Tripper
[5:48] 3. Tito Puente - Oye Como Va
[6:09] 4. Caribbean Jazz Project - Jamboree
[5:45] 5. Ray Barretto - Killer Joe
[3:42] 6. Poncho Sanchez - Watermelon Man
[6:14] 7. Cal Tjader - Soul Sauce (Guachi Guaro)
[5:38] 8. Ray Vega - Boperation
[4:25] 9. Ed Calle - Rum & Coke (Cuba Libre)
[5:06] 10. Pete Escovedo - 'ah' Bailar Cha-Cha-Cha
[5:28] 11. Poncho Sanchez, Ray Vega - Besame Mama

Cha Cha has the distinction of being one of the most dominant "pop" rhythms of the last 40 to 50 years and is characterized as having an upbeat, infectious rhythm, which creates a sense of playfulness and flirtation. The Cha Cha is said to be a combination of the Mambo and the American Swing.

Cha Cha is a Cuban innovation of the old Latin form (danson). Originally known as the Cha-Cha-Cha the Cha Cha became popular about 1954. Cha Cha is an off-shoot of the Latin dance 'Mambo'. In the slow Mambo tempo, there is a distinct sound in the music that people began dancing to, calling the step the "Triple" Mambo. Eventually it evolved into a separate dance, today known as the Cha Cha.

Cha Cha Party

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Various - Jazz Latino

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 70:37
Size: 161.7 MB
Styles: Latin jazz
Year: 2001
Art: Front

[4:38] 1. Paquito D'rivera - The Peanut Vendor
[6:03] 2. Mongo Santamaria - Cuco Y Olga
[8:00] 3. Tom Harrell - Expresso Bongo
[5:02] 4. Monty Alexander - Consider
[5:35] 5. Lenny Andrade - Manha De Carnival
[6:41] 6. Phil Woods - Nada Sera Como Antes
[5:15] 7. The Coryells - Allegro
[5:54] 8. Orquestra Nova - Arabesque
[3:34] 9. Paquito D'rivera - Chucho
[2:30] 10. Tango Bar - Como Dos Estranos
[5:59] 11. Chuck Mangione - I Do Everything For Love
[4:22] 12. Astor Piazzolla - La Camorra
[6:56] 13. The Conga Kings - Un Poco Loco

Paquito D'Rivera, M.Santamaria, Tom Harrel, C.Mangione, A.Piazzo. Culled from the Chesky Latin jazz archives, Jazz Latino: A Collection of Latin Inspirations takes 13 songs from 12 different artists (saxophonist Paquito d'Rivera has two tracks, "The Peanut Vendor" and "Chucho"), including Mongo Santamaria, Astor Piazzolla (who, unsurprisingly, plays a tango), and Lenny Andrade. Because the compilation is only coming from one relatively small label's catalog, the selection here isn't fantastic, but to be fair, it's not claiming to be a "best-of" collection, just an "inspired" one, and so in that respect, it works. ~ Marisa Brown

Jazz Latino