Tuesday August 24 2010, 10:25:13 AM | Posted by FaniaDigital

Our free download this month is no underrated gem. "Mama Güela" was one of Tito Rodríguez's greatest commercial hits - and the version included here for your listening pleasure is culled from the 1960 LP Tito Rodríguez At The Palladium, on the United Artists label.  Tito was on a roll at the time, recording and performing tirelessly.  The orchestra is perfectly calibrated on this particular cut - the groove is tight, and Tito's voice is raucous, without forsaking the gentlemanly finesse that always characterized him.  From the Fania All Stars to the Spanish Harlem Orchestra, many artists have covered this joyous Afro-Caribbean standard.  Now, you can listen to a definitive performance, and watch an animated video produced by Fania.

Click here to get your free download Tito Rodriguez – Mama Guela:

http://www.divshare.com/download/12249239-12c

VIDEO:


Tuesday August 24 2010, 10:08:09 AM | Posted by FaniaDigital

If the two-volume LP set Live At The Cheetah signified the emergence of the New York salsa explosion of the '70s, the equally double album Live At Yankee Stadium, released in 1975, marked the very zenith of the salsa phenomenon - its official introduction into the mainstream.

There is an irony, of course, to the music included in these excellent discs:  much of these tracks were actually recorded in Puerto Rico, and not at the Yankee Stadium.  The Yankee tracks were of lesser sonic quality, and the producers (wisely) decided to replace them with similar tracks recorded at the Roberto Clemente Coliseum.

Regardless of historical trivia, the music here brims with life.  The sound is warm and pristine, and the artists involved were at the very top of their game.  Included here is a wonderful version of Héctor Lavoe's ubiquitous anthem "Mi Gente," a rootsy "Que Rico Suena Mi Tambor" with el niño bonito de la salsa, Ismael Miranda, and the soulful Ismael Quintana debuting his solo career with "Mi Debilidad."

Most importantly, Live At Yankee Stadium will be forever remembered as the one album that established Celia Cruz, once and for all, as the unequivocal Queen of Salsa.  Celia had already experienced stardom in her native Cuba with La Sonora Matancera, and she continued occupying a vital place in tropical music through her memorable collaboration with Nuyorican bandleader Tito Puente in the '60s.  But it was her volcanic, 11 minute-long rendition of "Bemba Colorá" with the Fania All Stars that placed her smack in the middle of the salsa explosion.  More than three decades later, this epic track still sizzles.

The two volumes of Live At Yankee Stadium belong in any comprehensive collection of Afro-Caribbean music.  Even though the inevitable clash of egos did take place from time to time within the Fania camp, you can't help but marvel at the bonhomie with which superstars like Larry Harlow, Ray Barretto, Héctor Lavoe, Johnny Pacheco and Roberto Roena - to name but just a few - got together to perform some of the greatest dance music that this planet has ever experienced.

VIDEO FANIA ALL STARS AT YANKEE STADIUM:

Click on the album covers to get these releases on CD, MP3, Wav or Flac:

  


Tuesday August 24 2010, 06:56:08 AM | Posted by FaniaDigital

Don't forget to visit our exclusive page on the iTunes store, for a selection of Fania's best selling albums, as well as a number of digital-only releases.


Monday August 23 2010, 12:10:19 PM | Posted by FaniaDigital

Like most of the collaborations between trombonist, composer and musical director Willie Colón and mercurial Puerto Rican singer Héctor Lavoe, this album transcends the boundaries of salsa.  Released in 1970, "The Big Break" is a masterpiece of Latin music, the kind of formidable artistic statement that established the Fania label as a cultural icon-  going beyond the parameters of a company specializing in crowd pleasing dance music.

Needless to say, this is still a great party album, filled with dance friendly classics such as “Barrunto” and “Abuelita”.  At the same time, it crystallizes the Colón/Lavoe aesthetic that the duo had been developing on previous albums ("The Big Break" is Colón's sixth release on the Fania label.) 

Although they were years away from reaching the artistic zenith of future epics such as El Cantante and Periódico de Ayer, the songs on this collection express the combined strength of these visionary artists:  Colón's weakness for an edgy, dangerous sound based on the roughness of his two-trombone lineup.  The eclectic tendencies that had him adding revolutionary bits of Puerto Rican folklore on the six minute-long workout “Panameña”.  And Lavoe's irresistible sense of humor, which becomes particularly apparent on his nostalgic remembrance of his grandmother (“Abuelita”) and her hilarious sayings. 

Most importantly, the songs on "The Big Break" evoke the duo's combined cosmovision, which regards life as a combination of reckless joy and profound tragedy.  From the childlike wonder of “Ghana'E” and the grotesque mockery of “Canción Para Mi Suegra” to the fleshy swing of “Barrunto” and the morbid sadness of “No Cambiaré", this session is a roller coaster of intensity- a symphony of contrasting flavors, colors and feelings.

Perhaps the one moment that best encapsulates the transcendental qualities of this collection is the bridge of “Panameña”-  the moment when the tune stops on its tracks, Lavoe introduces la salsa de Puerto Rico, el aguinaldo (Puerto Rico's own salsa, the aguinaldo) and all hell breaks loose thanks to Colón's roaring trombone and the spidery piano lines courtesy of the maestro Profesor Joe Torres.  The resulting effect is nothing less of apocalyptic.

Of the many brilliant LP covers that graphic designer Izzy Sanabria designed for Fania (the Ray Barretto/Superman art for Indestructible comes immediately to mind), "The Big Break" may be the most notorious one. 

Click on the album cover to buy this album on cd or digital:

The art capitalized on Colón's ‘Malo’ image (he was initially called El Malo because the older musicians thought he was a poor trombone player, not a bad kid-  Willie then decided to use the gangster archetype as a gimmick.)  This time, Sanabria flew with the idea and devised a cover that replicated a Wanted by the FBI poster.  Only that the FBI in question was the Freaks of Bureau Investigation, Colón was armed with a trombone and was wanted for killing people...  with his exciting rhythm.

Using the project's limited budget to his advantage, the designer included a cheap photo of Colón and random fingerprints to create a realistic looking poster.  After its release, the company was contacted by the real FBI, which requested that the ‘Wanted by FBI’ text be removed from the cover.

Listening to these eight, timeless tracks decades after their original release, the music compels you to ask:  how could two young men in their '20 have so much to say?  How did they manage to record an album of such depth and beauty? 

It may be advisable to stop pondering such heady issues and enjoy the music instead.  I know I will.

Written by Ernesto Lechner

Ghana'E / Willie Colón

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Friday August 20 2010, 12:43:54 PM | Posted by FaniaDigital

Find more information about these artists including releases, pictures, biography and more by clicking their names. Celia Cruz, Tito Puente.


Wednesday August 18 2010, 04:53:56 PM | Posted by FaniaDigital

Here are some pictures of Larry Harlow’s in-store appearance at the Borders store to sign autographs of the new remastered CD “La Raza Latina."


Tuesday August 17 2010, 12:44:45 PM | Posted by FaniaDigital

Here are some great pictures from the one-time show that recreated La Raza Latina – A Salsa Suite from Larry Harlow. Last Saturday, thousands of people got together to listen and see Larry Harlow, Ruben Blades and La Raza Latina orchestra at Lincoln Center (New York City).

Thanks to Joe Conzo Jr. for sending us this pictures.

Click here to see more pictures!


Monday August 16 2010, 10:54:48 AM | Posted by FaniaDigital

Bronx-born timbalero and bandleader Orlando Marín has been a part of New York’s Latin music scene since his mid-teens when he formed his first band with vocalist Joe Quijano and pianist Eddie Palmieri. By the age of eighteen, Marín was leading his own orchestra and playing dance venues like the Tropicana, Stardust, and Hunts Point Palace. At a time when competition was strong and the top Latin bandleaders all battled for the title “Mambo King,” Marín built a reputation for having one of the tightest dance bands in the city. Marín describes his mind-set in this competitive environment: “My mentality is that I’ll get on the stage before or after anybody, and I’m going to leave the stage burning. And whoever burns it the best, that’s the king that night.”

Orlando Marín’s first big record deal came in 1956 with Fiesta Records, where he recorded two (shared) albums and several singles before being drafted to serve in Korea. “I had the hottest band in New York when I went to the Army in 1958,” Marín explains. “I had the top young musicians in New York at the time. I had [bongosero] Luis ‘Chicky’ Pérez, who Tito Puente grabbed after I left.” Being drafted may have altered the course of Orlando Marín’s career as a professional musician, but his connection to music remained strong even while in the Army. “I was drafted sometime in the early summer, April or May, and by Christmas, I was feeling brokenhearted. My band broke up, I was in the hills of Korea—there were no showers, nothing,” Marín explains. “We were living in Quonset huts—you know, with oil burners and stuff like that. So one night, someone said, ‘They’re having live music at the USO show; you should go down.’ So I got dressed up and went down there, and would you believe it, Noro Morales, the great pianist from Puerto Rico, is playing. On the drums, he’s got a kid called Mikey Collazo, the drummer from my [high] school. I knew the whole band—it was like a miracle. But the bigger thing that happened was that later on I joined an all-Army [music] contest that was done every year, and I won in the Pacific command. I toured the Pacific and played in different places, like Japan, Korea, Hawaii, and then Washington, D.C., for the finals. The finalists all went to The Ed Sullivan Show in 1959.”

After returning from military service in early 1960, Orlando Marín reorganized his orchestra and began playing clubs again, eventually gaining the attention of Alegre Records, one of the premier labels in Latin music during the 1960s. Marín explains in detail how he came to record for Alegre: “Mike Amadeo used to work for Alegre Records and Al Santiago, in their record shop [Casalegre], which was on Westchester and Prospect Avenue. He heard me play opposite [Johnny] Pacheco with my trumpet band here in 1960, and my band was cooking, you know. So he said, ‘Man, you guys are great, and we are going to recommend you to Al Santiago.’ And sure enough, Santiago said, ‘Yeah, we want to record you’—on the word of Mike Amadeo. Also, Mikey Collazo’s brother, Harold, worked [at the record store], and he recommended us too. So it was like heaven sent, you know, everything fell into place. But a very unusual story happened there, because Chivirico Dávila had just come to New York—he had left the Pérez Prado orchestra where he had substituted for Beny Moré, who quit and went back to Cuba to make his band. So Chivirico Dávila, in 1960, came to New York. He was in the store, the record shop, with Al Santiago when I walked in to tell Al, ‘Look, I can’t do the recording session now, because I have no singer.’ And he says to me, ‘Oh, don’t worry. You see that guy over there? He’s the best singer in the world.’ It happened to be Chivirico Dávila. You can’t plan this. You know what I’m saying? It’s unbelievable. I used the guy, I showed him the style I wanted, and he fell in like...coffee and milk. Absolutely. The guy was one of the best singers in the world for what they call salsa today, but then it was mambo, bolero, cha-cha-cha—he sings everything. A very nice man too.”

Click on the album cover to purchase this release on CD or Digital

In 1961, Alegre Records released the single “La Casa” by Orlando Marín and His Orchestra, and it quickly became a big hit in New York and abroad, particularly in Colombia, where Marín’s music was widely popular. Soon after the success of his first Alegre single, Marín recorded his first album for Alegre Records, Se Te Quemó la Casa. The success of the album helped keep Marín’s band in demand, and in 1964, they recorded a second album for Alegre, titled Que Chévere, Vol. II.

On Que Chévere, Orlando Marín and His Orchestra played a mix of up-tempo mambos, guaguancós, and son montunos. Absent from the album was the pachanga, a style that was featured prominently on Marín’s previous album but that was waning in popularity by that time. According to Marín, the personnel on Que Chévere was “very similar but not exactly the same” as the personnel on Se Te Quemó la Casa, which included Francisco “Paquito” Pastor (piano), Julio Andino (bass), Tito Jiménez (percussion), Pedro Chaparro (trumpet), and “Chicky” Pérez (percussion), among others. Like his first Alegre album, Que Chévere sold well and added to the popularity of Marín’s orchestra, and in the summer of 1965, they were contracted to play for two weeks along with Tito Puente and his orchestra at Club Virginia in Los Angeles—an experience that is a major highlight of Marín’s career.

After parting with Alegre in the mid-1960s, Marín recorded another mambo album with the Fiesta label, then a boogaloo album with the Brunswick label, and finally a Latin jazz album with Mañana, a small label run by Al Santiago, a man whom Orlando Marín holds in very high regard for his contribution to Latin music. “A person who needs a lot of credit is Al Santiago, who was a great thinker, you know, very progressive in his thoughts and very open-minded to many things. He opened the door for Pacheco, Charlie Palmieri, Eddie Palmieri, and many others—not so much for me, because I had recorded albums before [Alegre], but he did give me the chance to come back and do my thing.”

Although Orlando Marín has not recorded an album since the 1970s, his band continues to play and pay homage to the mambo era and to the many bands and musicians who never received proper recognition in their time. “They were all kings,” Marín said when talking about his peers in Latin music, many of whom have passed away. “Every band had a following, and, to your following, you were the king.”

Liner notes by Jonathan Reynaldo Bailey

El Timbalero / Orlando Marín

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