Poncho Sanchez - Latin Soul (1999)

  • 13 Oct, 21:57
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Artist:
Title: Latin Soul
Year Of Release: 1999
Label: Concord Picante[CCD-4863-2]
Genre: Jazz, Latin Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks + .cue,log)
Total Time: 71:13
Total Size: 472 MB(+3%)
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. El Conguero (Balmaseda-Goldberg) - 6:11
02. Ven Pa Bailar (Sanchez-Torres) - 5:46
03. Ican (Cano) - 7:46
04. Watermelon Man (Hancock) - 6:13
05. Conga Blue (Mure) - 7:32
06. Lisa (Bobo) - 8:51
07. Besame Mama (Santamaria) - 6:55
08. Guaripumpe (Trad.) - 8:54
09. Listen Here/Cold Duck Time (Harris) - 5:42
10. Mama Guela (Rodriguez) - 7:23

personnel :

Poncho Sanchez - congas, lead vocals, percussion, timbale solo (#8)
David Torres - piano
Ramon Banda - timbales, chekere
Tony Banda - bass, vocals, chekere
Jose "Papo" Rodriguez - bongos, chekere, congas
Sal Cracchiolo - trumpet, flugelhorn
Scott Martin - tenor saxophone, alto saxophone, baritone saxophone, flute
Francisco Torres - trombone
Mike Whitman - baritone saxophone (#6,8)

Recorded live at two leading California nightspots, Yoshi's in Oakland and the Latin-specializing Conga Room in Los Angeles (the actual sound in the Conga Room is never as good as that on this CD), Concord no doubt hoped for an exceptionally hot live session from this tireless defender of the Latin jazz tradition. What they got was merely a decent album, listenable, danceable, yet lacking that extra flash of Latin fire. Sanchez leads his usual eight-piece ensemble -- augmented at Yoshi's by Mike Whitman on baritone sax -- and feeds the percussive polyrhythmic battles with his congas (as well as a turn on the timbales on "Guaripumpe"). On the "Latin soul" agenda, there is a dead-on faithful rendition of "Watermelon Man," with a few histrionic things at the close, and a reprise of Eddie Harris' "Cold Duck Time," which soon turns into "Listen Here" and "Everything I Play Gonh Be Funky." There are also some spirited passings of the bop baton from trumpeter Sal Cracchiolo to trombonist Francisco Torres to tenor saxophonist Scott Martin and back again on "Ican." It's OK, but not Sanchez' best.~Richard S. Ginell