Newsletter






Home arrow Discography arrow Celia Cruz - Ritmo En El Corazon
Celia Cruz - Ritmo En El Corazon Print E-mail
Celia Cruz - Ritmo En El Corazon Personnel: Celia Cruz (vocals); Willie Colon (trumpet, background vocals); Jose Rodriguez, Leopolde Pinede, Lewis Kahn, Hector Zarzuela, Steve Gluzband, Angel Fernandez (trumpet); Jimmy Bosch (trombone); Jose Torres, Ricky Gonzales (piano); Sal Cuevas (bass); Jose Mangual (bongos, background vocals); Ray Barretto, Carlos Soto (congas); Johnny Almendra, Jimmy Delgado (timbal); Milton Cardona (tumbadora, background vocals); Tito Puente (percussion, background vocals); Carlos Dias, Cali Aleman, Yayo El Indio, Rogelio Martinez, Felo Barrios, Tito Allen, Ruben Blades, Adalberto Santiago (background vocals); La Sonora Mantacera.

Producers include: Javier Vazquez, Jerry Masucci, Willie Colon, Feliz Encuentro, Ray Barretto.

Recorded between 1975 & 1982.

Celia Cruz's epic discography is home to some of the best-loved Latin music ever put to tape, partially because the legendary singer consistently worked with the finest musicians in the genre. RITMO EN EL CORAZON brings together recordings the Queen of Salsa made in the 1970s and early '80s with such luminaries as Willie Colon, Ray Barretto, and Tito Puente. In addition to Cruz's always-appealing vocals, which exude rhythmic precision, a laid-back ease, and a sheer joy in performing, these tracks sport stunning chops from the band personnel, and their respective leaders (trumpeter Colon, conguera Barretto, and master percussionist Puente).

The fare here is largely old-school salsa, with its brew of big-band jazz, ballroom balladry, and--most dominantly--African and Latin rhythms. The moods shift from minor-key slink ("Tu Voz") to celebratory anthems ("Tu Musica Popular"), with hardly a down-tempo moment in the batch. The caliber of Cruz's output is consistently remarkable, and these tracks--given their superstar guests--push her formidable skills to an even higher level. For classic salsa and Cuban dance, it doesn't get much better than this.
 
< Prev   Next >