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VA-Gozalo-Bugalu Tropical V4-PERU cumbia mambo boogaloo-NEW 2LP

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Product Description

Gozalo-Bugalu Tropical V4-PERU cumbia mambo boogaloo-LP
Various —
Gozalo – Bugalu Tropical Vol 4 ...


NEW DOUBLE LP

Latin    
   
Various Artists
Gózalo! - Bugalú Tropical Vol 4
NEW CD Digipack

A fantastic set in Vampi Soul's Gozalo series of tropical grooves from Peru – cumbia, mambo, boogaloo and other of the late 60s sounds that work together masterfully, and lay the groundwork for international salsa and other Latin styles to come! Gozalo Vol 4 features numbers by Coco Lagos, Los Diablos Rojos, Chivirico Davila, Los Kintos, Pedro Miguel, El Combo De Pepe and other orquestas & leaders – a truly wonderful entry in one of our favorite series from our friends at Vampi Soul! Includes "Kintos Instrumental" by Los Kintos, "Saludo Maracaibo" by Pedro Miguel Y Sus Maracaibos, "Cumbayea" by Mario Allison Y Su Combo, "La Guarachera" by Nico Estrada Y Su Sonora, "Malambo" by Los Diablos Rojos, "La Charanga Del Espacio" by Carlos Pickling Y Orquesta, "Busco Una Chiquita" by Coco Lagos Y Sus Orates and many more. 28 tracks in all.

   
Volume 4 of our successful series of tropical Peruvian music of the 60s. An exciting, spicy mix of musical gems that fill in the link between the mambo era and the dawn of salsa in South America.


When drawing the musical map of Latin America, the mistake is often made to identify the zone of influence of Afro-Latin music only around the Caribbean. It's true that the great creators are Cuban and Puerto Rican, but when their music spread out across Latin America, similar scenes sprung up in other parts of the continent. It was during the 50s that the genre captivated Peru.

Tropical orchestras appeared everywhere with a repertoire based on mambos, guarachas and, to a lesser extent, boleros and merengues. However, over the Afro- Cuban foundation they added diverse influences and reached a new sound, different from their inspiration. Within the core of the tropical music scene, the Sonora de Lucho Macedo was the first group of its kind in the middle of an environment exclusively populated by orchestras.

Beyond his irrefutable professional merits, Macedo's essential contribution was to recruit musicians that later on would start the most important boogaloo groups. The first one to leave his band and go his own way was Joe Di Roma. Bongoist Ñiko Estrada left a little later to create his Sonora Antillana. From Macedo's band also came double bass player José "Pepe" Hernández, percussionists Mario Allison and Coco Lagos, trumpet player Tito Chicoma and singer Charlie Palomares - almost all of the main artists of the golden age of boogaloo in the mid-60s, each of them a director of their own band. 1962 saw the arrival of Nilo Espinosa, a saxophonist with a solid academic formation and a deep knowledge of jazz. The puzzle was completed with the self-taught pianist Otto de Rojas. They all knew each other from the hotels, parties and TV sets, but especially from the recording studio sessions.

The height of the tropical orchestras coincided with boogaloo. At that point the scenario had changed. The massive migration inland towards the capital brought along a radical change in popular music, giving birth to Peruvian cumbia, which also had a tropical foundation. The Afro-Cuban influence, without disappearing at all, left room for a Colombian influence. With the new decade the market was taken over by cumbia and salsa. An era had reached its end.    


Tracks list    
1. Saludo Maracaibo (Pedro Miguel y sus Maracaibos)
   
2. Boogaloo en ambiente (Alfredo Linares y su Sonora, canta Víctor Fuentes)
   
3. Yo traigo boogaloo (El Combo de Pepe, canta Charlie Palomares)
   
4. Cumbayea (Mario Allison y su Combo, canta Benny del Solar)
   
5. Psicosis (La Sonora de Lucho Macedo, canta Johnny Arce)
   
6. El Diablo (Compay Quinto)
   
7. Yo no pido nada (Orquesta Casino de Hugo Macedo, canta Pochita Rivera)
   
8. Guarachera (Ñico Estrada y su Sonora)
   
9. Guajireate (Coco Lagos y sus Orates)
   
10. Pa gozar candela (Betico Salas y su Sonora, canta Melcochita)
   
11. Boogaloo boogaloo (Joe Di Roma y su Orquesta, canta Manolo Castro)
   
12. Descarga Maracaibo (Pedro Miguel y sus Maracaibos)
   
13. Guayaba (Popi y sus Pirañas)
   
14. Peruvian guajira (Melcochita y Karamanduka, cantan Kiko Fuentes y Melcochita)
   
15. Kintos instrumental (Los Kintos)
   
16. Boogaloo en España (La Sonora de Lucho Macedo)
   
17. Yenyere cuma (Pedro Miguel y sus Maracaibos)
   
18. Pollo atrasado (Chivirico Dávila y Sonora MAG)
   
19. Busco una chiquita (Coco Lagos y sus Orates)
   
20. Caliente (Mario Allison y sus Estrellas)
   
21. La charanga del espacio (Carlos Pickling y Orquesta)
   
22. Por tu amor (Willy Marambio)
   
23. Canta, canta (Los Hilton's)
   
24. Descarga (Alfredo Linares y su Sonora)
   
25. El carbonero (Compay Quinto)
   
26. Aguanile (Los Girasoles)
   
27. Malambo (Los Diablos Rojos)
   
28. Mambo Ravel (Andrés de Colbert y Orquesta


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