Los Satelites - En Guardia (1976)

  • 24 Dec, 16:47
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Artist:
Title: En Guardia
Year Of Release: 1976/2025
Label: Especialistas Digitales
Genre: Latin Jazz, Salsa, Guaguancó, Cumbia
Quality: Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 37:05
Total Size: 218 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Por Siempre Te Amaré 3:20
02. Pica Pica 3:48
03. El Borracho 3:30
04. Mayba 2:31
05. Ódiame Si Puedes 2:09
06. No Sé Por Qué 3:28
07. Mi Alegría 2:44
08. El Lleva Y Trae 2:53
09. Estoy Solo 3:25
10. Guaguancó Divino 3:55
11. Ay, Mi Morena 2:30
12. Viento Sol Y Arena 2:53

Los Satélites were a Venezuelan salsa and tropical band formed in 1966 in Maracaibo by trombonist and bandleader José Rafael “Cheché” Mendoza, who created the orchestra at the height of the space-race era and chose the name to evoke the satellites that fascinated the world at the time. Shortly after their formation they moved to Caracas in search of a larger market, signed with the Discomoda label and recorded their first LP Siempre en órbita in 1971, a debut that introduced their blend of salsa, guaracha and cumbia and included the breakthrough hit “Pensando en Ti,” written by José Antonio Lazo “Cheo Palmar” and sung by Mauricio Conde. On the strength of “Pensando en Ti” and subsequent songs like “Traicionera,” Los Satélites toured widely in the early 1970s across the Caribbean and northern South America, establishing themselves as one of Venezuela’s leading dance orchestras while releasing albums that yielded further favorites such as “Mi boda campesina,” “El borracho,” “El lleva y trae,” “Pica Pica” and “Di corazón,” with vocalists including Rodrigo Mendoza, Orlando “Watussi” Castillo, El Chino Suárez, Hildemaro Ugas and Nal Belmonte passing through the lineup. The band’s catalog was later revisited on compilations like De Venezuela para el mundo in the 1970s and multiple “greatest hits” editions in the CD era, helping to keep “Pensando en Ti” and “Las Estrellas Brillarán” in circulation for new salsa audiences. In the 2010s and 2020s the legacy continued under the banner Los Satélites de Andy y Cheche Mendoza, with new recordings and digital releases such as Si Pudiera, modern versions of classics including “La Vecinita,” and a reissue of Siempre en órbita prepared for streaming services, ensuring that Los Satélites remained an active reference point for Venezuelan salsa and cumbia well into the twenty-first century.