Arturo Sandoval - Sangú (2026)

Artist: Arturo Sandoval
Title: Sangú
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: TM Records
Genre: Jazz
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 41:55
Total Size: 98.7 / 270 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Sangú
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: TM Records
Genre: Jazz
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 41:55
Total Size: 98.7 / 270 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Scat (3:59)
2. Sangú (3:27)
3. La Ventura (3:14)
4. Days In The Sun (3:09)
5. Azulito (3:30)
6. Babalu Ayé (3:13)
7. With The People (2:52)
8. Panza (3:18)
9. New Paradise (3:27)
10. Rolling Hills (3:55)
11. Red Trumpet (2:55)
12. El Río Suena (5:04)
Arturo Sandoval — the peerless trumpeter, bandleader, composer, and Latin music icon who has been recognized with 10 GRAMMY Awards and a 2013 Presidential Medal Of Freedom — announces SANGÚ, a new album out May 1.
Sandoval also shares the album’s lead single, the simmering and indefatigable “Scat.” Driven by a deep Afro-Cuban funk groove and layered with explosive brass, the track captures the raw energy and rhythmic fire at the heart of SANGÚ; voice and trumpet chase each other with wit, daring, and pure rhythmic joy. “Scat” is out now on all digital platforms and can be heard here.
SANGÚ captures the 76-year-old Sandoval in a moment of undeniable creative vitality. Throughout the album’s 12-tracks, SANGÚ delivers a gloriously unbound vision of Afro-Cuban funk, one that’s both ancestral and strikingly modern. It’s a swirl of bebop, fiery jazz fusion, and batá-inspired rhythms, punctuated by left-field flashes throughout: you can hear hints of Fela Kuti’s expansive Afrobeat, Chet Baker’s dusky ambience, organ-powered Memphis soul, and even slick French house. This is Sandoval at his most rooted, most expressive, and most fearless.
Born from an intimate, family-driven creative process, SANGÚ was shaped at home and built from trust, play, and deep musical kinship. Conceived and created in collaboration with his son Arturo “Tury” Sandoval III and daughter-in-law / manager Melody Lisman, the album opened a new space in Sandoval’s life and work, igniting an intergenerational artistic dialogue. Together, they set out to create a record that could carry Arturo’s sound into the future while honoring the elemental forces that shaped him: Afro-Cuban percussion, Yoruba spiritual memory, Cuban phrasing, bebopfire, funk, folklore, and the electrifying spirit of risk.
As a result, SANGÚ represents one of his most deeply rooted and expressive works in recent years, while it reconnects Sandoval with the powerful musical heritage that shaped his earliest artistic identity, formed in his hometown of Artemisa, Cuba. The DNA of SANGÚ reaches back to the groundbreaking spirit that animated Irakere, the groundbreaking group Sandoval co-founded in Cuba with Chucho Valdés and Paquito D’Rivera. SANGÚ taps into that era’s fearless fusion, distilling decades of experience into a showcase for an artist fully in command of a disparate but alchemical musical vocabulary: Batá-inspired rhythms, congas, bells, güiro, brass choirs, montuno language, jazz harmony, and funk propulsion packaged into an emphatic, organic whole.
SANGÚ is generous with its richness, whether it’s the patient restrait and lyricism of “Red Trumpet,” the spiritually
stirring “Babalu Ayé” (a tribute to Sandoval’s profound connection to San Lázaro), or the ritualistic and urgent collision of bebop bite and percussive Afro-Cuban momentum on the album’s title track, “Sangú.” In a sense, SANGÚ is biography abstracted into sound — an immediate and joyful journey that reveals, over its twelve tracks, an artist synthesizing his life’s work, still curious and willing to surprise himself as he expands his artistry.
From the earliest stages of its creation, SANGÚ was recognized and nurtured by Daisuke Oda and Darren Romanelli, whose creative spirit, vision, and unwavering support helped make the project possible. Through Magic House in Tokyo, they did more than support an album; they helped protect and champion a work of deep artistic and cultural significance. As visionary cultural supporters and early champions of this music, Magic House and its founders are woven into the story of SANGÚ in a lasting and meaningful way. Learn more about Magic House here.
Even after a lifetime of extraordinary accomplishments, Arturo Sandoval approaches music with the same curiosity, passion, and joy that first inspired him as a young boy in Cuba. His trumpet playing remains instantly recognizable for its radiant tone, astonishing range, and emotional depth; it universally represents true artistic freedom, cultural exchange, and the enduring power of music to transcend borders. Reflecting on his life in music, Sandoval once said, “The only thing I hope is that when I am gone people remember me as someone who loved music deeply and respected it completely.”
Sandoval also shares the album’s lead single, the simmering and indefatigable “Scat.” Driven by a deep Afro-Cuban funk groove and layered with explosive brass, the track captures the raw energy and rhythmic fire at the heart of SANGÚ; voice and trumpet chase each other with wit, daring, and pure rhythmic joy. “Scat” is out now on all digital platforms and can be heard here.
SANGÚ captures the 76-year-old Sandoval in a moment of undeniable creative vitality. Throughout the album’s 12-tracks, SANGÚ delivers a gloriously unbound vision of Afro-Cuban funk, one that’s both ancestral and strikingly modern. It’s a swirl of bebop, fiery jazz fusion, and batá-inspired rhythms, punctuated by left-field flashes throughout: you can hear hints of Fela Kuti’s expansive Afrobeat, Chet Baker’s dusky ambience, organ-powered Memphis soul, and even slick French house. This is Sandoval at his most rooted, most expressive, and most fearless.
Born from an intimate, family-driven creative process, SANGÚ was shaped at home and built from trust, play, and deep musical kinship. Conceived and created in collaboration with his son Arturo “Tury” Sandoval III and daughter-in-law / manager Melody Lisman, the album opened a new space in Sandoval’s life and work, igniting an intergenerational artistic dialogue. Together, they set out to create a record that could carry Arturo’s sound into the future while honoring the elemental forces that shaped him: Afro-Cuban percussion, Yoruba spiritual memory, Cuban phrasing, bebopfire, funk, folklore, and the electrifying spirit of risk.
As a result, SANGÚ represents one of his most deeply rooted and expressive works in recent years, while it reconnects Sandoval with the powerful musical heritage that shaped his earliest artistic identity, formed in his hometown of Artemisa, Cuba. The DNA of SANGÚ reaches back to the groundbreaking spirit that animated Irakere, the groundbreaking group Sandoval co-founded in Cuba with Chucho Valdés and Paquito D’Rivera. SANGÚ taps into that era’s fearless fusion, distilling decades of experience into a showcase for an artist fully in command of a disparate but alchemical musical vocabulary: Batá-inspired rhythms, congas, bells, güiro, brass choirs, montuno language, jazz harmony, and funk propulsion packaged into an emphatic, organic whole.
SANGÚ is generous with its richness, whether it’s the patient restrait and lyricism of “Red Trumpet,” the spiritually
stirring “Babalu Ayé” (a tribute to Sandoval’s profound connection to San Lázaro), or the ritualistic and urgent collision of bebop bite and percussive Afro-Cuban momentum on the album’s title track, “Sangú.” In a sense, SANGÚ is biography abstracted into sound — an immediate and joyful journey that reveals, over its twelve tracks, an artist synthesizing his life’s work, still curious and willing to surprise himself as he expands his artistry.
From the earliest stages of its creation, SANGÚ was recognized and nurtured by Daisuke Oda and Darren Romanelli, whose creative spirit, vision, and unwavering support helped make the project possible. Through Magic House in Tokyo, they did more than support an album; they helped protect and champion a work of deep artistic and cultural significance. As visionary cultural supporters and early champions of this music, Magic House and its founders are woven into the story of SANGÚ in a lasting and meaningful way. Learn more about Magic House here.
Even after a lifetime of extraordinary accomplishments, Arturo Sandoval approaches music with the same curiosity, passion, and joy that first inspired him as a young boy in Cuba. His trumpet playing remains instantly recognizable for its radiant tone, astonishing range, and emotional depth; it universally represents true artistic freedom, cultural exchange, and the enduring power of music to transcend borders. Reflecting on his life in music, Sandoval once said, “The only thing I hope is that when I am gone people remember me as someone who loved music deeply and respected it completely.”
Download Link Isra.Cloud
Arturo Sandoval - Sangú FLAC.rar - 270.7 MB
Arturo Sandoval - Sangú MP3.rar - 98.8 MB
Arturo Sandoval - Sangú FLAC.rar - 270.7 MB
Arturo Sandoval - Sangú MP3.rar - 98.8 MB