Trio Los Panchos – Todo Panchos (Las 24 Grandes Canciones) [1990]
Trio Los Panchos – Todo Panchos (Las 24 Grandes Canciones) [1990]
Disc: 1
1. Si Tu Me Dices Ven/Lodo
2. Contigo Aprendi
3. Pecadora
4. Voy a Apagar la Luz
5. Rayito de Luna
6. Vagabundo
7. Lo Dudo
8. Llevatela
9. Nave del Olvido
10. Mujer
11. Me Voy Pa'L Pueblo
12. Perdida
Disc: 2
1. Nosotros
2. Basura
3. Sabor a Mi
4. Barca
5. Esta Tarde Ví Llover
6. Sin Ti
7. Hiedra
8. Alma, Corazón y Vida
9. Reloj
10. Solo
11. Adoro
12. Espinita
Trio Los Panchos were the godfathers of trio music with incredibly charming vocal harmonies to melt your heart, great musicianship and lovely song lyrics about love sound and lost. In the "The Billboard Guide to Tejano and Regional Mexican Music," writer Ramiro Burr calls the group, "the preeminent trio...which through its tours took the music to a worldwide audience." He's right. There are others, like Trio Los Dandy, Tres Teyes etc, but for the amount of hits Los Panchos had, they are the best and you get most of those hits in this CD collection.
Trio Los Panchos were the godfathers of trio music with incredibly charming vocal harmonies to melt your heart, great musicianship and lovely song lyrics about love sound and lost. In the "The Billboard Guide to Tejano and Regional Mexican Music," writer Ramiro Burr calls the group, "the preeminent trio...which through its tours took the music to a worldwide audience." There are others, like Trio Los Dandy, Tres Teyes etc, but for the amount of hits Los Panchos had, they are the best and you get most of those hits in this CD collection. ---Nancy Martinez, amazon.com
The quintessential classic bolero trio, Los Panchos were formed in New York in 1944 by Mexicans Alfredo Bojalil Gil and Chucho Navarro and Puerto Rican Hernando Avilés. The trio's innovative format, which would become a standard of the genre, featured three voices and three guitars, as well as Gil's distinctive use of the Mexican requinto guitar, an instrument he created himself, for all the lead parts. Los Panchos became one of the most famous Latin American musical acts of the 20th century, making their name synonymous with the bolero and exporting the genre all over the world, selling million of records, and appearing in countless films. Some of their finest recordings were made in collaboration with female vocalists, notably American singer Eydie Gorme, but also Argentines Estela Raval and María Martha Serra Lima. Main composers Gil and Navarro remained the trio's core throughout the decades, while the lead vocal spot was assumed by a succession of male singers, including Julio Rodríguez, Johnny Albino, Enrique Cáceres, and Rafael Basurto. ---Mariano Prunes, Rovi
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Last Updated (Saturday, 05 March 2016 10:44)