by jorge » Sun Jan 18, 2009 6:05 pm
This fantastic record is about swing, afinque, and really smooth vocals, the percussion is support and mostly not lead. Alberto Ruiz, Orlando Vallejo, and Carlos Querol did some great lead, duo, and harmony singing.
From a rhythm perspective, Patato and Armando Peraza (bongo), the piano player Eulogio Castelero, the bass player Guillermo Aran, plus others on maracas, clave, and a killer campana, provide a solid rhythm section, but remember this was mid-40s and Patato and others were just starting to push the envelope on what the (single) conga played with a conjunto. Making the rhythm swing with one conga was the key. Armando does throw in some nice licks and solos on bongo. Most of this stuff has been copped and played by bongo players in salsa bands over the past 60+ years. For this reason, it might not sound that innovative to you, but be assured that bongo players who were not creative or who copied others' styles and licks did not keep their band gigs for long in La Habana in those years. The campana (bongo bell) player is not credited in the liner notes, but is playing at the same time Armando is riffing on bongo, so it's not him. If you listen carefully you will hear how the bell makes the whole rhythm swing. No timbales. You can hear Patato playing the 2 bombo beats using the bass of his single conga in the the same time pattern that salsa conga players use the low tumbador. Check out the bell and other rhythm on Moforivale el Tambo, Que se Vaya, and Sonaremo el Tambo the swing is great and the cadencia (precision of the timing) is killer. Again, listen carefully to the bell parts and bell riffs.
This is a really awesome record, listen with good headphones or speakers to hear the subtle stuff that makes it so amazing. Don't expect Anga/Giovanni style fireworks, in some ways it's better than that! (for those of us who appreciate dynamics, subtlety, and swing).