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| STAR PROFILE |
SPANISH HARLEM ORCHESTRA
2003 Grammy
Nominee for "Best Salsa Album" Winners of 2003 Latin Billboard
Award for "Salsa Album of the Year-Best New Group". In just
one year this band has managed to enter the hearts of a massive amount
of salsa lover's... and have probably even accomplished to bread some
new salsa enthusiasts. They have managed to become a favourite of many
top DJ's and dancers around the globe... and have received nothing but
great reviews from a large amount writers. Spanish Harlem
Orchestra has appeared throughout the USA in Chicago, Connecticut, Los
Angeles, NYC, Philadelphia, Rhode Island, San Francisco, Seattle, Virginia,
Washington DC, just to name a few. Internationally they have been filling
venues in Barcelona, Belgium, Dublin, Istanbul, Holland, London, Manchester,
Paris, Scotland and scheduled to make many more international appearances.
In July 2003,
Spanish Harlem Orchestra appeared as the main act on the General Motors
Stage at the week long Montreal Jazz Festival...one of the most prestigious
jazz festivals in the world. They appeared Remarkably,
it is a story that remains largely untold. El Barrio, as it is called
within the community, has been the birthplace for Salsa, Latin Soul, Boogaloo
and countless other variants within the tropical Latin idiom. From Tito
Puente to Marc Anthony, this small enclave has exerted a monumental effect
on the sound of American music today. Using the most accomplished players
in the New York Latino community, this album features a cross-section
of compositions that create a bridge into this exhilarating place. Led by world
famous pianist and arranger Oscar Hernandez, with outstanding performances
by such singers as Ray De La Paz, Hermán Olivera, Frankie Vazquez and
musicians such as Ruben Rodriguez and Bobby Allende, this album is a long-overdue
missing link to the music and history of Spanish Harlem. This album does
not celebrate the famous figures of Salsa: rather, it is a glimpse inside
the secret history of the Nuyorican experience. Hector Rivera, Orlando
Marin, Tito Rodriguez, and Pete “El Conde” Rodriguez are not household
names, yet their contribution to American culture at large surrounds us
everyday in the popular music of such artists such as Marc Anthony and
Carlos Santana, who both owe an enormous musical debt to there unsung
masters of La Musica Latina. "Un Gran
Dia En El Barrio" (One great day in the neighborhood). The album
is Harlem's answer to Cuba's Buena Vista Social Club. It is a musical
portait of a tiny neighborhood that changed the sound of the entiore world.
Spanish Harlem has given birth to everything from 60's-era Boogaloo to
mind-bending salsa and many grooves in between. This record enlists some
of today's most respected, important and often overlooked players in modern
salsa to pay tribute to their ancestors and history. This album is a long-overdue
missing link to the music and history of Spanish Harlem. |