Cañonazo was the first release on Fania Records in 1964. It was recorded by Pacheco y Su Nuevo Tumbao, led by salsa legend Johnny Pacheco, featuring Pete “El Conde” Rodríguez on vocals. The album includes covers of popular Cuban artists from the ¢50s and ¢60s like “Fania” by Reinaldo Bolaños and the title track, except for “Dakar, Punto Final,” which was written by Pacheco. Featuring (AAA) lacquers cut from the original masters, this 180-gram vinyl reissue celebrates the album’s 60th anniversary.
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Celebrating the 50th anniversary of Celia Cruz and Johnny Pacheco’s first collaboration on Vaya Records, the bestselling album Celia & Johnny, Craft Latino proudly presents this remastered reissue featuring (AAA) lacquers cut from the original master tapes and pressed on 180-gram vinyl. Featuring massive hits such as “Quimbara,” “Toro Mata” and “Canto a La Habana,” the iconic album catapulted the legendary Cuban singer’s status as the “Queen of Salsa.”
- A1: Tandem - 93 Hardcore
- A2: Alibi Montana Feat Ol Kainry, Dany Dan, Nubi & Sefyu
- A3: Lim - A Neuf Ans Déjà
- A4: Stomy Bugsy - Avoir Le Pouvoir
- A5: Soprano - La Colombe
- B1: Mala Feat Lunatic - Hommes De L'ombre
- B2: Les Sages Poètes De La Rue - Qu'est-Ce Qui Fait Marcher
- B3: 2 Bal 2 Neg' Feat Rocca & Nob - Labyrinthe
- B4: Kamnouze Feat Diam's & Jango Jack - Promise
- B5: Chiens De Paille Feat Akhenaton, Oxmo Puccino & Veust
Die Vintage Sounds Vinyl-Reihe ist zurück mit einer neuen Ausgabe, die diesemal der kubanischen Musik gewidmet ist. Eine Auswahl mit 16 Tracks der größten klassischen kubanischen Songs. Darunter: COMPAY SEGUNDO, JOHNNY PACHECO Y SU CHARANGA, PÉREZ PRADO und viele mehr!
“New York’s Harlem River Drive is a dividing line, a highway where the rich zip past the poor,” says singer Jimmy Norman. Eddie Palmieri’s Latin-funk band of the same name tackled these hard truths, playing prisons and speaking to the common man. Ultimately, Norman and Palmieri made a powerful socio-political statement that continues to resonate to this day." Pablo Yglesias/Wax Poetics. When initially released in 1971, many critics panned Eddie Palmieri’s album Harlem River Drive. Those critics were wrong. Regardless of critical opinion, the release was not the crossover success Palmieri and Roulette Records had hoped for, at least in the immediate. Over the years the release has developed a following among listeners, DJs, and aficionados of rare-grooves. The record may have been recorded towards the end of the Latin soul era, yet it features that genre's wonderful mix of Puerto Rican soul, Spanish Harlem Latin, and New York funk. Palmieri worked with an incredibly talented crew of Latin and R&B session musicians to create this quintessential New York vibe, a synthesis of funk and Afro-Cuban sounds. Contributors include Victor Venegas from Mongo Santamaria’s band, Palmieri’s brother Charlie, an accomplished musician in his own right, Bruce Fowler who went on to join Frank Zappa’s band, Dick Meza who went on to great things with Tito Puente, Ray Barretto and Celia Cruz, as well as Andy Gonzalez who’s pedigree includes recordings with Barretto, Johnny Pacheco, Willie Colon and even Chico O’Farrill. Also appearing Randy Brecker and one of the all-time greatest of the greats Bernard Purdy. An over-arching theme of Harlem River Drive is the thought that, as Palmieri puts it “The U.S. is richest country, all this immense wealth, side by side with the most intense poverty, racial prejudice; how is that possible?” A question that’s perhaps more even more relevant today than it was in 1971. A question that can be further explored with Get On Down’s reissue of this seminal recording.
- Compay Segundo - Hey Caramba
- Johnny Pacheco Y Su Charanga - Acuyuye
- Pérez Prado - Mambo N. 5
- Beny Moré - ?Como Fue?
- Cachao Y Su Combo - Cogele El Golpe
- Tito Rodríguez - Mambo Manila
- Orquestra Aragon - El Bodeguero
- Perry Como - Papa Loves Mambo
- Ray Barretto - Summertime
- Celia Cruz & La Sonora Matancera - Dile Que Por Mi No T
- Machito - Relax And Mambo
- Eddie Palmieri - Ritmo Caliente
- Mongo Santamaria - Linda Guajira
- Noro Morales Y Su Orquesta - Saona
- Mon Rivera Y Su Orquesta - Lluvia Con Nieve
- Tito Puente Y Su Orchestra - Ran Kan Kan
Die Vintage Sounds Vinyl-Reihe ist zurück mit einer neuen Ausgabe, die diesemal der kubanischen Musik gewidmet ist. Eine Auswahl mit 16 Tracks der größten klassischen kubanischen Songs. Darunter: COMPAY SEGUNDO, JOHNNY PACHECO Y SU CHARANGA, PÉREZ PRADO und viele mehr!
- A1: Pete Rodriguez – I Like It (I Like It Like That)
- A2: Eddie Palmieri – Café
- A3: Joe Bataan – Gypsy Woman
- A4: Ray Barretto – Acid
- LP1: Side B
- B1: Héctor Lavoe – Mi Gente
- B2: Richie Ray/Bobby Cruz – Aguzate
- B3: Cheo Feliciano – Anacaona
- B4: Celia Cruz/Johnny Pacheco - Quimbara
- C1: Ismael Rivera – Las Caras Lindas
- C2: Willie Colon/Héctor Lavoe – Che Che Colé
- C3: Héctor Lavoe – El Cantante
- C4: Ray Barretto – Indestructible
- C5: Joe Cuba Sextet – El Ratón
- D1: Fania All Stars – Estrellas De Fania
- D2: Willie Colón – La Murga
- D3: Willie Colón/Rubén Blades – Pedro Navaja
This collection features sixteen of the most renowned salsa and Latin soul singles released on Fania Records, and its subsidiaries, between 1964-1978, making it the perfect introduction to the legendary catalog. It celebrates the trailblazing label’s 60th anniversary, and iconic artists Willie Colón, Héctor Lavoe, Rubén Blades, Johnny Pacheco, Celia Cruz and more. Archival images and new liner notes, in English and Spanish, by New York-based music historian Aurora Flores are also included.
Released on the Verve label in 1968, Giblet Gravy marked jazz/soul guitarist George Benson's fourth album as a leader. It features Benson backed by an all-star group arranged and conducted by Tom Mcintosh, that includes such jazz luminaries as Ernie Royal, Pepper Adams, Johnny Pacheco, Billy Cobham, Ron Carter, and Herbie Hancock. According to AllMusic reviewer Richard S. Ginell, the label's "immediate goal was to groom Benson as the next Wes Montgomery (who was about to leave Verve) - and so he covers hit tunes of the day, playing either with a big band plus voices or a neat quintet anchored by Herbie Hancock, and the sound is contoured to give his guitar a warm mellow ambience. But the eclectic Benson is his own man, as his infectious repeated-interval rhythm trademark tells us on his self-composed title track. George's work is always tasty and irresistibly melodic."
- 1: Tito Puente & His Orchestra - Ran Kan Kan
- 2: Willie Rosario & His Orchestra - Dame Tu Amor Morenita
- 3: Tito Rodriguez & His Orchestra - La Ley Del Guaguanco
- 4: Orlando Marvin & His Orchestra - Ritmo Bembe
- 5: Cortijo Y Su Combo & Ismael Rivera - Volare
- 6: Eddie Palmieri & Ismael Quintana - Conmigo
- 7: Ray Barretto - Guajira Y Tambo
- 8: Johnny Pacheco Y Su Charanga - Acuyuye
- 9: Noro Morales & His Quintet - Saona
- 10: Orquesta Aragon Feat. Cheo Feliciano - Son Al Son
- 11: Setenta - Como Rinkin
As a true reference cultural media, Trace completes its musical offer with a first collection of 3 vinyls! Find the cream of Salsa selected by Trace and journalist Osman Jr. With Tito Rodriguez-Setenta-The Alegre All Star....
This mega-rare 1969 album pays tribute to the Bronx and Brooklyn neighborhoods where young Latinos had invented the boogaloo a few years earlier. This record highlights the quality of Peruvian boogaloo and the talent of musicians such as pianist Otto de Rojas and percussionist Coco Lagos. First time reissue. In the mid-sixties, when young Latino musicians in New York fused Afro-Cuban rhythms with rock, soul and jazz, they had no idea that their boogaloo bang bang would reverberate just as strong and loud in a distant South American country. From 1955, La Sonora Macedo, took Cuban music to every corner of Peru, backed the leading musicians of the Peruvian tropical universe, such as Ñiko Estrada, Joe di Roma, the double bass player Pepe Hernández, and the trumpet players Tito Chicoma and Charlie Palomares. All diehard fans of Cuban music, always alert to any new artist arriving from the island. In the early sixties, light rock, doo-wop, ballads, Italian songs and bossa nova paraded across Lima's stages, making performances by Cuban bands, previously so frequent, a thing of the past. Moreover, the unanimous success of the Beatles from 1964 onwards, gave the impression that music from the English-speaking world would dominate the rest of the decade. But this was not the case. In large part because of Manuel Guerrero's good relations with U.S Latino labels, such as Alegre Records, which released the initial recordings by Johnny Pacheco and Charlie Palmieri, allowing listeners in Lima to follow the development of the salsa movement almost from the beginning. MAG was undoubtedly the best representative of these new sounds. In 1969, the LP "Acabo con Lima, huyo pa' Nueva York" was released on this label, a project which brought together three figures from Lima's show business world: Manuel Antonio Guerrero, owner and founder of MAG, who wasn't shy of joining in on the chorus and percussion during recordings, Pablo Villanueva "Melcochita", a multifaceted artist from a talented musical family from the popular district of La Victoria, was responsible for the vocals and percussion on the album. And the third Lima show business figure in this project was the musician, singer and comedian Alberto Montroy Laostervened, who gained fame in the sixties while still in his twenties for his imitation of Cantinflas, the Mexican actor. Alberto bore a devilish resemblance to Cantinflas, not only in his gestures but also physically. Under the name of Pepe Moreno "Karamanduka" he also went on to record songs abroad such as "El boogaloo de Cantinflitas". "Acabo con Lima, huyo pa' Nueva York" was immediately re-released in other countries, highlighting the quality of Peruvian boogaloo and talent of musicians such as pianist Otto de Rojas and percussionist Coco Lagos, who feature prominently on the album. Songs such as 'Vuela mi descarga', 'Peruvian boogaloo' and 'Peruvian guajira', pay tribute to the Bronx and Brooklyn, neighborhoods where young Latinos had invented the boogaloo a few years earlier.
- A1: 1 Eddie Palmieri & Ismael Quintana - Conmigo
- A2: 2 Ray Barretto - Guajira Y Tambo
- A3: 3 Tito Puente - Ran Kan Kan
- A4: 4 Issac Delgado - El Macao
- A5: 5 Orlando Marvin & His Orchestra - Ritmo Bembe
- A6: 6 Johnny Pacheco Y Su Charanga - Acuyuye
- A7: 7 Orquesta Araga3N - El Paso De Encarnacia3N
- B1: 8 Mon Rivera Y Su Orquesta - Lluvia Con Nieve
- B2: 9 Celia Cruz Con La Sonora Matancera - El Que Siembra Su
- B3: 10 Noro Morales Y Su Orquesta - Saona
- B4: 11 Cachao Y Su Combo - Cogele El Golpe
- B5: 12 Compay Segundo - El Gallo E'jando
- B6: 13 The Alegre All Stars - Ay Camina Y Ven
- B7: 14 Willie Rosario - Dame Tu Amor Morenita
14 of the top salsa hits by Edddie Palmieri,Ray Baretto, Celia Cruz...
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