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Mongo Santamaria ‎– Mongo's Greatest Hits (1995/2006)

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Mongo Santamaria ‎– Mongo's Greatest Hits (1995/2006)

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1 	Afro Blue 	3:55
2 	Mi Novia 	2:50
3 	Linda Guajira 	3:06
4 	Pito Pito 	2:43
5 	Mazacote 	10:38
6 	Para-Ti 	3:01
7 	Watermelon Man	2:20
8 	Manteca 	5:25
9 	Sabroso 	3:40
10 	Conga Pa Gozar 	4:05
11 	Federico 	3:25
12 	Mi Guaguanco 	4:35
13 	Para Ti (Alternate) 	6:02
14 	Las Guajiras 	7:44

The Mongo Santamaria Orchestra
Mongo Santamaria - Composer, Congas, Percussion
Francisco Aguabella - Congas
Willie Bobo - Timbales
Rudy Calizado 	Vocals
Rudy Calzado 	Vocals
João Donato - Piano
Modesto Duran - Congas
Felix "Pupi" Legarreta - Violin
Rolando Lozano - Flute
Armando Peraza - Bongos, Congas, Percussion
Niño Rivera - Tres
Jose "Chombo" Silva - Sax (Tenor)
Carlos Vidal - Congas, Percussion
Willie 3030 - Timbales
Carlos Yidal - Congas, Percussion

 

This is a excellent single-disc sampler of what Mongo Santamaria was like before "Watermelon Man" catapulted him into the charts. Some of the Fantasy tracks sound like the musicians were just off the boat from Havana, and are a bit primitive in contrast to the brassy Santamaria of the mid- to late '60s, but they have overwhelming charm. The revered "Afro-Blue" can be heard in its original, spooky, stripped-down form, and it would be hard for anyone to resist the voodoo spell that the ten-plus minute "Mazacote" conveys. Besides Santamaria himself, included among the world-class percussionists on this record are Willie Bobo and Armando Peraza. The CD version adds four tracks, including "Watermelon Man" from the Battle/Riverside period and an alternate take of "Para Ti." --- Richard S. Ginell, Rovi

 

Born and raised in Havana, Cuba, Ramón “Mongo” Santamaría established himself as one of the premier congueros (conga players) in the Havana dance band scene.

In the late 1940s he played with Orquesta Casino de la Playa, where he met Pérez Prado, and when Prado moved to Mexico City in 1948 to start his own band, Santamaría went with him. In 1950 he travelled with Prado to the U.S., where legendary bandleader Tito Puente saw him play in New York and recruited him for his own band. Santamaría played with Puente for six years, during which time his reputation grew with American audiences and musicians.

In 1957 Santamaría went to San Francisco at the invitation of vibraphonist and Latin jazz combo leader Cal Tjader and there he began to record his own albums, establishing himself as an innovator in the fusion of Latin rhythms with jazz and pop music. His cover of Herbie Hancock’s Watermelon Man reached Number 10 on the pop charts in 1963 and his own composition, Afro Blue, first recorded in 1959, became a Latin jazz standard.

Mongo Santamaría’s powerful playing and outgoing nature made him an inspiration to percussionists in diverse music scenes and helped make the conga drum an important instrument in U.S. pop music. --- americansabor.org

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