Bobby Montez - Jungle Fantastique! / Viva! Montez (2021)
Artist: Bobby Montez
Title: Jungle Fantastique! / Viva! Montez
Year Of Release: 2021
Label: Blue Moon
Genre: Jazz, Latin, Bossa Nova
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 70:48 min
Total Size: 395 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Jungle Fantastique! / Viva! Montez
Year Of Release: 2021
Label: Blue Moon
Genre: Jazz, Latin, Bossa Nova
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 70:48 min
Total Size: 395 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. African Fantasy
02. Chango
03. Jungle Sunset
04. Kon-Tiki
05. Swinging at the M
06. Speak Low
07. Carioca
08. Cha Cha Cha Por Nueva York
09. Summertime
10. My
11. Holiday in Havana
12. Garden of Allah
13. Brazilian
14. Jungle Stars
15. Tremendo Cha-Cha
16. But Heaven Knows
17. Guajira Josephina
For years, the Bobby Montez Quintet was one of the best Latin Jazz groups on the West Coast. A short time after the quintet was formed in 1956, they became the house band of the tiny “M” Club in East Los Angeles.
Their success awoke the interest of such popular L.A. venues as the Crescendo, Melody Room, Interlude, and Latin Quarter, where they eventually made the delight of their Latin jazz audience in the late 50s and early 60s, and spurred the Sunday night dance sessions at the famous Palladium ballroom.
Montez believed that VIVA! MONTEZ —the second album on this compilation— represented “our best interpretations of Mambo and Cha-Cha-Cha to date.” For the leader, his chief aim from the beginning was to find a modern approach to Latin music. In his own words, “this, and the full utilization of vocal sounds combined with the instrumentation, has been and still is of great importance to me and my music.”
Their success awoke the interest of such popular L.A. venues as the Crescendo, Melody Room, Interlude, and Latin Quarter, where they eventually made the delight of their Latin jazz audience in the late 50s and early 60s, and spurred the Sunday night dance sessions at the famous Palladium ballroom.
Montez believed that VIVA! MONTEZ —the second album on this compilation— represented “our best interpretations of Mambo and Cha-Cha-Cha to date.” For the leader, his chief aim from the beginning was to find a modern approach to Latin music. In his own words, “this, and the full utilization of vocal sounds combined with the instrumentation, has been and still is of great importance to me and my music.”