The second album pairing Palmieri
and Tjader, Bamboleate moves beyond El Sonido Nuevo into the respective
territories of each artist. "Bamboleate" is the Latin cooker ones
expects from Palmieri but did not find on the more subdued El Sonido Nuevo.
"Semejanza" is an equally affecting jazz lilt led by Tjader. Framed
by a melody that could have come straight off the Vince Guaraldi Trio's Charlie
Brown Christmas album, it has an equally indelible, locomotive rhythm. Tjader's
samba, "Samba De Los Suenho," is a welcome departure from the
relative rigidity of El Sonido Nuevo. Also vital are the vocal tracks
(Palmieri's); the blatant channel-switching in "Guajira Candela" is
an abuse of stereo separation, however. (Use a second voice or instrument for
that.) "Pancho's Seis Por Ocho" is typical of the deep, mid-tempo,
Afro rhythm of Bamboleate and El Sonido Nuevo. Trombonist Mark Weinstein
contributes the closing "Ven Y Recibelo (Come an' Get It)," a
mod/soul cooker on a par with the best of Verve all-stars Tjader, Ogerman,
Winding, and Schifrin. Finally, the album was reissued in 1977 as Tico
LPS-88806 and distributed by Fania; the reissue at least features illustrations
of Tjader and Palmieri by Jose Vargas.
Review - Tony Wilds
http://www.allmusic.com/album/bambol%C3%A9ate-mw0000273328
8 comments:
Greetings, The album in the link is El Sonido Nuevo. Thank you for all of the work that you put into doing this.
hi!
any chance to re-up "Bamboleate" album?
gracias,
~
reupload plese please. Thanks
New link:
http://netkups.com/?d=0055161744431
Hi JM
Just to let you know that the last link appears as inactive. Could you place a recent one? I've been looking this album for a very long time. Thanks so much :D
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