VA - Rumba Blues 1940-53 How Latin Music Changed R&B (2010)
BAND/ARTIST: Various Artists
- Title: Rumba Blues 1940-53 How Latin Music Changed R&B
- Year Of Release: 2010
- Label: Rhythm & Blues Records
- Genre: Blues, R&B, Latin
- Quality: FLAC (tracks)
- Total Time: 01:12:27
- Total Size: 245 mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Joe Smith - That's Your Last Boogie
02. T-Bone Walker - T-Bone Blues
03. Pee Wee Crayton - Daybreak
04. Edgar Hayes - Fat Meat 'n' Greens
05. Johnny Otis Orchestra - Mambo Boogie
06. Lowell Fulson - Back Home Blues
07. Lloyd Glenn - Cuba Doll
08. Ray Charles - Heartbreaker
09. Big Mama Thornton - Hound Dog
10. B.B. King - Woke Up This Morning
11. Professor Longhair - Hey Now Baby
12. Dave Bartholomew - Country Boy
13. Clarence Garlow - Bon Ton Roula
14. Sugar Boy Crawford - Jock-O-Mo
15. Fats Domino - Mardi Gras in New Orleans
16. Lloyd Price - Tell Me Pretty Baby
17. Billy Wright - Hey Little Girl
18. Kid King's Combo - Banana Split
19. Louis Jordan and His Timpani Five - Early in the Morning
20. Chris Powell's Five Blue Flames - I Come from Jamaica
21. Sonny Thompson - Jumping with the Rumba
22. The Ray-O-Vacs - My Baby's Gone
23. Skeets Tolbert - Rhumba Blues
24. Jimmy Reed - Roll and Rhumba
25. Muddy Waters - I Can't Be Satisfied
26. Champion Jack Dupree - Mexican Reminiscences
01. Joe Smith - That's Your Last Boogie
02. T-Bone Walker - T-Bone Blues
03. Pee Wee Crayton - Daybreak
04. Edgar Hayes - Fat Meat 'n' Greens
05. Johnny Otis Orchestra - Mambo Boogie
06. Lowell Fulson - Back Home Blues
07. Lloyd Glenn - Cuba Doll
08. Ray Charles - Heartbreaker
09. Big Mama Thornton - Hound Dog
10. B.B. King - Woke Up This Morning
11. Professor Longhair - Hey Now Baby
12. Dave Bartholomew - Country Boy
13. Clarence Garlow - Bon Ton Roula
14. Sugar Boy Crawford - Jock-O-Mo
15. Fats Domino - Mardi Gras in New Orleans
16. Lloyd Price - Tell Me Pretty Baby
17. Billy Wright - Hey Little Girl
18. Kid King's Combo - Banana Split
19. Louis Jordan and His Timpani Five - Early in the Morning
20. Chris Powell's Five Blue Flames - I Come from Jamaica
21. Sonny Thompson - Jumping with the Rumba
22. The Ray-O-Vacs - My Baby's Gone
23. Skeets Tolbert - Rhumba Blues
24. Jimmy Reed - Roll and Rhumba
25. Muddy Waters - I Can't Be Satisfied
26. Champion Jack Dupree - Mexican Reminiscences
Latin rhythms have infiltrated into every new branch of popular music that has emerged during the twentieth century. Jelly Roll Morton and W.C. Handy incorporated the Cuban habanera into early jazz and blues; the Argentinean tango found its way into twenties dance-band music; the Brazilian baion and bossanova styles wound their way through the sixties beat boom and were revived in the drum?n?bass of the nineties. But none had such an all-pervasive influence as the rumba. Its journey from the Middle-East through North Africa and Spain to the New World brought it into American dance halls in the thirties. The syncopated, rhythmic riffs of bandleaders such as Xavier Cugat helped to liberate dancers from stuffy foxtrots and waltzes, opening up an altogether more sensual world of excitement and exoticism. In post-war popular music, rumba is everywhere, from Dave Bartholomew?s Country Boy to the Clash?s Rock The Casbah, picking up Little Richard?s Slippin? and Slidin? and the Beatles? Ballad Of John And Yoko along the way. Even hillbilly records featured rumba bass lines. Its 3-2 clave rhythm, which Bo Diddley stylised and made into his very own, became an integral part of American music and continues to cast its spell over popular music to the current day.
Blues | R&B | Oldies | Latin | FLAC / APE
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