Andres Y Sus Estrellas

https://www.injerah.com/web/image/product.template/6884/image_1920?unique=3657434
(0 avis)

IN STOCK
1LP - EL PALMAS MUSIC
1976 => 2023

32,00 € 32.0 EUR 32,00 € Hors TVA

32,00 € Hors TVA

Not Available For Sale

  • Statut
  • Genre
  • Genre
  • Format
  • Date de parution
  • Date de la réedition
  • Label

Cette combinaison n'existe pas.

Statut: IN STOCK
Genre: LATIN, JAZZ
Format: 1 LP
Date de parution: 1976
Date de la réedition: 2023
Label: EL PALMAS MUSIC

TRACKLIST 


Side A: 

A1. Canuto – A2. No Quiero Bailar Pegao – A3. Condicion – A4. El Andino Parrandero – A5. Yo La Mato


Side B: 

B1. Rico y Sabroso – B2. Llanto de Luna – B3. La Mazucamba – B4. El Jibarito – B5. Linda Caraquena


DESCRIPTION


El Palmas Music are reissuing a rare 1970s Venezuela salsa record that spotlights the work of enigmatic Caracas guitar maestro, Andrés MorosGiven his singular vision on the 1976 salsa masterpiece, Andres y Sus Estrellas, the absence of information on Venezuelan musician Andres Moros, also known as “Morito”, feels almost criminal. What we do know is that Morito first began his musical journey as a live performer in the bars and nightclubs of Caracas in the 1960s-70s, at the full height of the Venezuelan salsa boom, and was a core figure on the scene. Alongside a small band, Morito would frequently perform in the bustling live music circuits of Caracas and La Guiara, where he first met the notable singer Nano Grant.

Andres y Sus Estrellas was the result of a long-held dream of Morito’s to partner with Grant to record an album. This album, Morito’s debut project, is now getting reissued by El Palmas Music. With big band compositions spiced with the flavour of Caribbean rhythm, the album is a seminal example of Venezuelan music at the height of its salsa movement.

Grant’s effortlessly smooth flowing vocals chronicle tales of love, passion and party, masterfully guided under Morito’s cohesive musical direction.Here, the arrangement flows with succinct percussion, dramatic pauses, and satisfying brass bursts all timed to perfection and employed with astonishing versatility from track to track. “Canuto” is a soft, sensual calling to end the tears, “no quiero que llores más”, soulfully implores Grant. “No Quiero Bailar Pegao” is an upbeat merengue-infused track that humorously chronicles tales of sweaty, intimate dancefloors. On the bolero-ballad “Condición”, a female vocalist known today only as Yara passionately navigates heartbreak and reconciliation, the anguish of her vocal underscored by sweeping brass. Meanwhile, “La Mazucamba” is a skittish ode to the act of dancing, a gleeful celebration to what the record as a whole evokes: dancing with feeling; come joy or sorrow; the rhythm moves us.

Andres y Sus Estrellas is a cult classic that encapsulates the very best of Venezuelan’s golden salsa-era; a must-have for any collector looking to add an overlooked gem of the genre to their music library.