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Fom the Sleevenotes by Paul Murphy: Jazz Room Records:
"I took a trip to the If Music Store, 2nd Floor, above the paint shop and that got me hooked on the sound of COPA SALVO.
"You NEED this!" said Jean-Claude. "They're an amazing and unique Jazzy Combo from Japan!" But at the time I was stuck in some dead end Gulag job getting things together for the launch of a record label idea I'd been working on and the bobs were just not in abundance. Especially in the part of the wallet marked "Japanese Vinyl Import Department". But he gave it a spin and I was pretty much hooked from that day on.
Things soon looked up though and the next sighting of COPA SALVO was on the BBE Records release: A Journey Into Deep Jazz Vol. 3 (Compiled by that very same Jean-Claude!) which featured COPA SALVO - Hasta La Victria Siempre, a pounding piano driven homage to Fidel which incidentally is one of the featured numbers of the album that is soon to be released on Jazz Room Records.
I kept looking for more COPA SALVO as I was really intrigued by the sound they produced and, over a period of time I managed to obtain nearly all of their sparse catalogue. Once Jazz Room Records had started to get established and the release of the Colin Curtis Presents: indigo jam unit compilation had been a success I thought "Time for COPA SALVO to make their Jazz Room debut!"
This Jazz Room Records Compilation will feature their unique and highly original compositions which are an energetic meltdown of Funk, J-Jazz, Afro-Cuban, Boogaloo and range from the Heavy Latin Jazz Vibes of Bolivia 67 to the Kung Fu '70's sound of Tong King Rock with a journey that takes in an Eastern Folktale and a Jump Up Life along the way."
Vocal/Guiro : Tadahiro Masuda
Piano : Eri Konishi
Bass : Hironori Kobayashi
Percussion : Yo Sato
Percussion : Pyon Nakajima
Timbales/Drum : Peach Iwasaki
- A1: Trepa No Coqueiro - Ari Kerner Veiga De Castro ; Ari Kerner Veiga De Castro
- A2: Uma Casa Portuguesa - Reinaldo Ferreira, Matos Sequeira ; Artur Fonseca
- A3: Fado Madragoa - José Galhardo ; Raul Ferrão
- A4: Sem Razão - Fernando Farinha ; Alberto Correia
- A5: Sempre Que Lisboa Canta - Aníbal Nazaré ; Carlos Rochat
- A6: Lerele - Francisco Muñoz Currito ; Genaro Monreal Lacosta
- A7: Si Si Si - José Pérez Moradiellos
- A8: No Me Tires Indiré - Ramón Parelló ; Genaro Monreal Lacosta
- A9: Lisboa Antiga - José Galhardo ; Raul Portela
- B1: Quem O Fado Calunia - Aníbal Nazaré ; Raul Ferrão
- B2: Lisboa À Noite - Fernando Santos ; Carlos Dias
- B3: Marujo Português - Linhares Barbosa ; Artur Ribeiro
- B4: Fado Gingão - Lamberto Braz ; Moniz Trindade (Egas Moniz Félix Trindade)
- B5: Mi Florero - Luis Gómez Gutiérrez-Otero
- B6: Aïe Mourir Pour Toi - Charles Aznavour
- B7: Marcha Do Centenário - Norberto De Araújo ; Raul Ferrão
- B8: Verde Limão
Amália Rodrigues, international star, nicknamed "the Queen of Fado", had a special relationship with France and Paris in particular. From the end of the 1950s, she met with success and became a popular artist, filling the Parisian halls. This record recounts this through three performances at the ABC, the Alhambra and the Bobino, preceded by a recording in the French radio studios.
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