Ray Barretto – Que Viva la Música (1972/2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 192 kHz]

Ray Barretto - Que Viva la Música (1972/2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 192 kHz] Download

Artist: Ray Barretto
Album: Que Viva la Música
Genre: Latin Jazz, Salsa
Release Date: 1972/2023
Audio Format:: FLAC (tracks) 24 bit, 192 kHz
Duration: 36:16
Total Tracks: 7
Total Size: 1,44 GB

Tracklist:

1-1. Ray Barretto – Que Viva la Música (05:30)
1-2. Ray Barretto – Bruca Maniguá (04:05)
1-3. Ray Barretto – La Pelota (04:18)
1-4. Ray Barretto – El Tiempo lo Dirá (04:22)
1-5. Ray Barretto – Cocinando (10:13)
1-6. Ray Barretto – Triunfó el Amor (03:09)
1-7. Ray Barretto – Alafia Cumaye (04:36)

Download:

Craft Latino releases the post-50th anniversary reissue of Ray Barretto’s classic salsa album, Que Viva La Música. A landmark title in the influential bandleader and conguero’s prolific catalog, Que Viva La Música features such favorites as “Cocinando,” “La Pelota,” and the title track – all performed by Barretto’s legendary original band (including Adalberto Santiago and Orestes Vilató). The long-out-of-print album was cut from the original master tapes (AAA) by Kevin Gray at Cohearent Audio and is making it’s high-resolution digital debut.Considered by many Afro-Cuban music scholars to be a highlight of Barretto’s prolific career – as well as a touchstone of ’70s salsa music, Que Viva La Música found the bandleader reaching a new apex. In liner notes for an earlier CD edition of the album, music journalist Ernesto Lechner wrote that the artist’s “transition from the early charanga and Latin soul excursions of the ’60s to the hard-edged salsa sound of the ’70s had been successfully completed. Barretto had raised the temperature of his music as high as it could possibly get. The beats, the swing, and the intensity of his musical manifesto was simply reckless. His band, too, had achieved a complete communion of musical souls….”

Remaining active until his death in 2006, Barretto released more than 50 albums during his career, including nine with his celebrated band, New World Spirit, in the ’90s and 2000s. Among many honors, Barretto earned a GRAMMY® for his 1988 collaboration with Celia Cruz, Ritmo en el Corazón, while in 1999, he was inducted into the International Latin Music Hall of Fame. In his final year, he received the prestigious Jazz Masters Award from the National Endowment for the Arts.

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