Theme: Chin chon chow – Louie Ramírez
Song-Artist-Album-Label
Moderna muchacha – Joe Loco – Ultra-Lounge Vol. 17: Bongo Land – Capitol
A night in Tunisia – Latin Jazz Sextet – Joe Loco – Ultra-Lounge Vol. 17: Bongo Land – Capitol
Club Caballeros – Laurindo Almeida – Joe Loco – Ultra-Lounge Vol. 17: Bongo Land – Capitol
Mambo Jambo – Xavier Cugat – The Original Latin Dance King – Sony
Tuxedo – John Reids – Morphine Mambo Jazz Club – Plastic Records
Sabre dance – Lalo Schifrin – Mambo Mania Talkin’ Verve – Verve
Hip hug her – Chico O’Farrill – Mambo Mania Talkin’ Verve – Verve
Mambo de las brujas – Francy Boland – Mambo Mania Talkin’ Verve – Verve
Mambo de los dandis – Nicola Conte – Bossa per Due – Eighteenth Street Lounge Music
Seven steps to heaven – Sammy Figueroa & His Latin Jazz Explosion – The Magician – Savant Records
Caminos de Machu Picchu – Ray Mantilla Space Station – Synergy – Red Records
Leeway – Grafitti – Grafitti – Self-produced: Tom Graf and Ray Obiedo-www.tomgraf.com
Route 66 – Bebo Valdés with Israel López "Cachao", "Patato" Valdés, and Paquito D’Rivera – El Arte del Sabor – Blue Note
Dance with me – Emmet Wheatfall and Noah Peterson – When I Was Young – Self-produced album: Peterson Entertainment, LLC
A felicidade – Antonio Carlos Jobim & Vinícius de Moraes – Black Orpheus Soundtrack – Novabossa Red Hot – Verve
The girl from Ipanema – Stan Getz, João Gilberto, Astrud Gilberto & Antonio Carlos Jobim – Novabossa Red Hot – Verve
Brigas nunca mais – Jacob Melchior – It’s About Time – Self-produced album: www.jacobmelchior.com
Leaps & bounds – Axel’s axiom – Uncommon Sense – Armored Records
Mesie Julián – Josh Rouse – El Turista – Yep Roc Records
One note samba/Surfboard – Stereolab + Herbie Mann – Red Hot +Rio – Verve
The boy from Ipanema – Crystal Waters – Red Hot +Rio – Verve
Highlights of the show:
Latin Soul aired today an interesting first part on Latin club music reminiscent to decades before the 60's, as many tunes had that a feeling of old noir B&W movie when action could happen in smoke-full clubs where frentic mambos where played by handsome-kitsch numerous-lineup orchestras. The highlight of the show today is the compilation “Mambo Mania”, a surprising collection where there's room to more than mambo.
In the Talkin' Verve series, the compilation “Mambo Mania” released in 1998 offers a refreshing collection of songs by artists such as Chico O'Farrill, Cal Tjader or Miguelito Valdés, to others not so familiar with Latin sounds as jazz musicians Wes Montgomery, or Francy Boland. The overall result is a festive bunch of songs going joining mambo tunes with those of lounge organs and big orchestras, even including raw Cuban percussion by “Patato” Valdés doing a cover of the Brazilian classic “Mas que nada”. As this one, other tunes don´t relate much to mambo as the circus-like Lalo Schifrin cover of “Sabre dance”, or his jazz version of the Cuban classic “El manisero”, here entitled “The peanut vendor”. Cal Tjader´s tune “Curaçào” is also far from pure mambo. All in all, if not the mambo album you wanted, it truly puts together some mambo with a misterious organ tinge and other big orchestra curiosities that make the listening a trip along styles and approaches to mambo and Latin tunes in general, like Herbie Mann's tune “Cuban potato chip”, or Francy Boland´s pair of themes. Remarkable is the opening track“Hip hug her”, the Booker T Jones' song, version by Chico O'Farrill, who also closes the compilation with “Descarga número 1000” as example of a sophisticated mambo. As mentioned, a musical trip to explore on Latin tunes ranging from mambo-like tunes to orchestral arrangements tunes with a lounge tinge to it. Let´s just enjoy the enterteining variety of Latin music, and learn about curious versions of songs you didn´t think you could come across in a mambo album.
Monday, August 9, 2010
August 10 - Show #57
Posted by David Hervás at 6:49 PM
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