Mostrando postagens com marcador Celia Cruz. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Celia Cruz. Mostrar todas as postagens

25.5.21

CELIA CRUZ & RAY BARRETTO - Ritmo En El Corazon (1988) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Celia Cruz's epic discography is home to some of the best-loved Latin music ever put to tape, partially because the legendary singer consistently worked with the finest musicians in the genre. RITMO EN EL CORAZON brings together recordings the Queen of Salsa made in the 1970s and early '80s with such luminaries as Willie Colon, Ray Barretto, and Tito Puente. In addition to Cruz's always-appealing vocals, which exude rhythmic precision, a laid-back ease, and a sheer joy in performing, these tracks sport stunning chops from the band personnel, and their respective leaders (trumpeter Colon, conguera Barretto, and master percussionist Puente).
The fare here is largely old-school salsa, with its brew of big-band jazz, ballroom balladry, and--most dominantly--African and Latin rhythms. The moods shift from minor-key slink ("Tu Voz") to celebratory anthems ("Tu Musica Popular"), with hardly a down-tempo moment in the batch. The caliber of Cruz's output is consistently remarkable, and these tracks--given their superstar guests--push her formidable skills to an even higher level. For classic salsa and Cuban dance, it doesn't get much better than this. by AllMusic  
Tracklist :
1     El Chisme 4:36
Raquel Attias
2     No Me Cambie Camino 4:32
C. Alonso Curet
3     Para Decirte Adios 5:04
Francisco Melero
4     Mala Suerte 5:08
Johnny Ortiz
5     En Que Quedamos 4:55
Fredérico Baena
6     Tu Musica Popular 4:51
Johnny Ortiz
7     Bambarakatunga 4:34
Titti Sotto
8     Ritmo En El Corazon 4:43
Johnny Ortiz
Credits :
Arranged By – Angel Fernandez (faixas: 1, 2, 6), Ricky Gonzalez (faixas: 3, 4, 5, 8, 9)
Bass – Sal Cuevas
Bongos – Carlos Soto
Coro – Adalberto Santiago, Felo Barrios, Ray Saba
Executive-Producer – Jerry Masucci
Leader, Congas, Producer – Ray Barretto
Piano – Ricky Gonzalez
Timbales – Jimmy Delgado
Trombone – Jimmy Bosch
Trumpet – Angel Fernandez, Hector Zarzuela, Steve Gluzband
Vocals – Celia Cruz 

CELIA CRUZ & WILLIE COLON - The Winners (1987-1992) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Cruz with Willie is just about as sure a thing as Celia with Johnny (Pacheco). Surer, maybe, since C&J have made far more recordings than C&W. Celia Cruz is the nearest thing to an icon in contemporary salsa, and since she reaches at least two generations, you can bet on this reaching at least the Top Three, if not the zenith. by John Storm Roberts
Tracklist :
1     Un Bembe Pa' Yemayá 5:45
Titti Sotto
2     Son Matamoros 4:18
Tate Guerra
3     Vendedores 5:46
Yolanda Cobelo
4     El Paraíso 5:16
Pablo Branda
5     Dice Antón 5:19
Johnny Ortiz    
6     Yo Si Soy Veneno 6:15
Hermes Naranjo
7     Se Tambalea 4:29
Ernesto Duarte
8     Aché Para Todos 4:22
Tate Guerra
Credits :
Bass – Oscar Cartaya
Congas – Bobby Allende
Piano  – Jose Ortiz
Vocals  – Celia Cruz
Choir/Chorus, Performer, Producer, Trombone  – Willie Colón
Coro – Adalberto Santiago, Domingo Quiñonez, Milton Cardona, Tito Allen, Willie Colon
Timbales, Percussion [Minor] – Marc Quiñonez
Trombone – Angel Vasquez, Barry Rogers, Leopoldo Pineda, Steve Turre

CELIA CRUZ • TITO PUENTE - Cuba y Puerto Rico Son ... (1966-2006) RM / FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Although they'd appeared together several times, this was the first time that Celia Cruz and Tito Puente had been featured together on an LP, and fortunately not the last. Cuba y Puerto Rico Son… has firepower like no listener could have expected, despite the fact that two of Latin music's most explosive artists were headlining an LP. All of the major Cuban and Puerto Rican forms are heard, from the opening mambo ("La Guarachera," with no holds barred) to bomba (the equally frenetic "La Plena Bomba Me Llama"), and a softer detour into bolero for "Desencanto." (Celia even sang a sultry pop number for "Mi Desesperacion.") Puente's orchestra is in prime form, and he provides all the arrangements, while Cruz ably matches the band for energy. An outing remarkably free of salsa, Cuba y Puerto Rico Son… covers nearly every popular Latin rhythm and remains one of the high points in each artist's nearly incomparable discographies. by John Bush
Tracklist :
1     La Guarachera 2:44
Rafael DaVila
2     Mi Desesperación 3:15
Roberto Cole
3     La Plena Bomba Me Llama 2:47
Rafael DaVila
4     Descencanto 4:10
Luis Amadori / Enrique Santos Discépolo
5     Cumbiando 2:33
Henry Castro
6     Tinicue 3:05
Eduardo Angulo
7     No Hay Amigos 2:54
Eliseo Grenet
8     Me Acuerdo de Ti 4:03
Gustavo Seclen
9     No Juegue con el Diablo 2:45
Pablo Chorot
10     Herencia Gitana 3:11
Mostazo / R. Perello / S. Cantabrana     
11     La Rueda 2:03
Victor Manuel Mato Argumendo
12     Salve Pa'ti 2:12
Rafael DaVila
Credits :
Saxophone – Al Abreu, Jesus Caunedo, Milt Hisler, Shepp Pullman  
Choir/Chorus – Santos Colon, Felo Brito, Willie Torres,       
Vocal, Choir/Chorus – Celia Cruz
Congas – Frankie Malable
Bongos, Cencerro – Jimmy Centeno, Jose Mangual Jr.,
Piano – Gilbert Lopez
Arranger, Choir/Chorus, Conductor, Drums, Musical Direction, Timbales, Vibraphone – Tito Puente
Bass (Acoustic) – Bobby Rodriguez
Trombone – Mark Weinstein, Sonny Russo, Barry Rogers, Jose Rodriguez,
Trumpet  – Pat Russo, Victor Paz, Pedro "Puchi" Boulong, Jimmy Frisaura,   

THE TWO POOR BOYS — Joe Evans & Arthur McClain (1927-1931) The Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order | DOCD-5044 (1991) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

So deeply ingrained are perceptions of race and ethnicity in North American culture that certain artists who recorded during the 1920s and ...