| <!--<img src="http://17salsa.net/site/images/about-cd.gif"" width="147" height="20" vspace="2">-->Croatiansalsa, Cuban ska, and Oregonian mambo!?!? These are three of the
unlikely gems listeners will find onAfro-Latin Party.
What started out as an effort to provide the perfect soundtrack to a Latin dance
party became a tribute to the global appreciation and realization of the musical
ricochet between Cuba and Africa. Central to the Afro-Latin phenomenon isAfricando, who
provide three songs onAfro-Latin Party, each with a different African
lead singer. In the 1960s and 1970s, the biggest names in African
music—including such heavyweights as Youssou N’Dour and Salif Keita—were
performing Latin music, thanks to vinyl that came over from abroad. Cultural
exchange between Cuba and the socialist governments in Mali and other parts of
West Africa was a regular phenomenon. Performers like the Fania All Stars and
Celia Cruz toured Africa and became musical icons. In 1992, legendary Africando founders Ibrahim Sylla and Boncana Maïga
traveled to New York to record with top local salsa musicians, many who were
taken by surprise by these Africans performing their phonetically learned
Spanish lyrics. Interestingly, many of the band members on the three Africando
tracks here, also play on other tracks onAfro-Latin Party. “I once asked [Putumayo founder] Dan Storper, ‘If you could sign any band in
the world ever, who would you sign?’” says album producer and VP of A&R
Jacob Edgar. “He said Bob Marley and thought for a moment, and then said
Africando.” The band, which uses a revolving roster of African singers, “takes
these two separate worlds, and adds something to the style, in the way they sing
and the way they arrange, that is so magical. It is almost better than the sum
of these two powerful musical elements,” adds Edgar. It is not surprising to find NuyoricanJosé Mangual Jr.on
the collection. His song, “Ritmo con Aché” celebrates the African roots in
Latino culture, referring to the West African Yoruba word, aché—a divine life
force from the santería religion, which blends West African spirituality and
Catholicism. In 1968, Mangual joined forces with Willie Colón and Hector Lavoe
to record some of the most influential salsa albums of all time. Nor is it a
shock to hearChico Álvarezon the set. He’s probably best
known for his highly respected New World Gallery program on WBAI radio in New
York. Here he sings “Cógele el Gusto,” a song made popular by Celia Cruz in the
early 1960s. It was also one of the earliest tracks to use the word salsa to
describe Afro-Cuban dance music. This track was first released in 1981 on SAR,
the same label that has put out much Afro-Latin music. Things get interesting whenSka Cubano’s“Babalu”—another
tribute to santería—rings through the sound system. Ska Cubano exists as if Cuba
never closed its doors to the rest of the Caribbean in 1959. Before that, styles
like Trinidadian calypso maintained great popularity in Cuba. With old school
Cuban players and a young, stylish ska singer from South London, this band is
sure to make waves as Americans hear more from them in the future. Cubismo—whose presence on this album confirms the global
reach of Afro-Latin music—is not only Croatia’s bestsalsaband, they
pride themselves on being able to compete with the hottest groups out of New
York or Havana. Jacob Edgar came across the band in his pre-producer days as a
music journalist, when he wrote them up for world music mag The Beat, a review
that Cubismo later quoted in their own liner notes. Portland, Oregon’sPepe and the Bottle Blondes—who are led
by a former singer from Pink Martini—deck themselves out with an updated 1950s
kitsch mambo delivery. “Cuéntame Que Te Pasó” is a taste from their
self-released debut album Latenight Betty. Also from the west coast is
Congo-bornRicardo Lemvo, who is equally at home singing in
English, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Lingala, and Kikongo. The CD is rounded
out with a salsified Martinique classic, first recorded by Rasta banjo player
Kali, but performed here by Martinique-born, Paris-basedzouk-super-producerRonald Rubinel. Even with all the geographic and era crisscrossing on the album, at its coreAfro-Latin Partyis still a dance record beckoning party-goers to
traverse the planet while they navigate the dance-floor. |