It’s been awhile since we heard something new from the Grammy-winning Spanish Harlem Orchestra(SHO), but on September 28th, 2010 they released their fourth album, Viva la Tradicion.
Aptly titled, Viva la Tradicion is as strongly rooted in the Latin salsa/jazz movement as the 13 piece collective is and in case you weren’t sure, the second song on the cd, Mi Herencia Latina(My Latino Heritage), opens the path by recognizing some the forepapis y foremamis of the genre: Celia Cruz, Hector Lavoe, Tito Puente, Beny More, Compai Segundo, Bobby Capo and acknowledging the many genres like bomba, plena, guaguanco, rhumba, and son that intersect like our own identities.
9:11 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Movies|Music|New York City · Comments Off
4 Aug 2007
If watching Marc Anthony and Jennifer Lopez in el Cantante, which opened yesterday, left you wanting more salsa and if you’re in NYC then you’re in luck. Today at Central Park’s SummerStage, the Spanish Harlem Orchestra will be headlining bringing their classic salsa sound downtown from el Barrio at a FREE concert. Opening for the SHO are my friends (no seriously) are Tato Torres and Yerbabuena bringing jibara music to la gente. So grab a blanket and something cool to drin porque hoy the only thing hotter than the sun is gonna be la musica!.
8:00 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Uncategorized · Comments Off
7 May 2007
As a Nuyorican, the sound of summer for me has always been not the oceans waves but rather salsa music. For me then the Spanish Harlem Orchestra’s new release, United We Swing, available May 15th, couldn’t come at a better time. These Grammy wining artists bring classic big band salsa via Spanish Harlem, NYC more commonly known as el barrio. United We Swing reminds me of when I was a child watching my mother get dressed up to go dancing at the Palladium or the old Copacabana where dancing, not drinking or picking up a date, was the main affair, and the musica was live not dj’ed. With good reasons, the musicians that make up the Spanish Harlem Orchestra have worked with the legends of salsa like Tito Puente, Hector Lavoe, and Celia Cruz.
One would think it not easy to follow on the success of their previous album, Across 110th Street, which won the Grammy for Best Salsa Album in 2004. With their third album, United We Swing, they have not only matched but surpassed expectations. En El Tiempo Del Palladium plays tribute to the golden age of Latin dance institutions through a son montuno.
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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