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Celia Cruz/Johnny Pacheco - Celia & Johnny


Label:

Fania Records

Genre:

Latin

Product No.:
AFNA 35936
UPC: 888072504660
Availability:
In Stock
Category:

180 Gram Vinyl Record


New Arrival

180 Gram LP
$29.98

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180-gram vinyl

All-analog mastering from the original tapes

Tip-on gatefold jacket

Breakthrough salsa album by Cuban singer Celia Cruz!

Celia y Johnny, undoubtedly the most important album in Celia Cruz's career, opened the doors of success for the famous Cuban singer with the force of a raging bull. Bandleader Johnny Pacheco had bigger plans for Celia and for his celebrated Fania/Vaya label's 1974 release.

His idea of creating the consummate conjunto recording lacked one vital ingredient. An exciting partner to lead the ensemble. That person was Celia Cruz. And the well-renowned Celia & Johnny sound was created. At completion, Johnny knew that he had produced the ultimate "salsa" album. Available on 180-gram black vinyl in gatefold tip-on jacket and featuring all-analog mastering from the original tapes.

The singer had been fighting to break out onto the salsa scene since her arrival to the United States in 1962. Her career had been lethargic during the era of the boogaloo. In the early 1970s, a series of commercial flights were hijacked to Cuba, becoming a weekly event. Fearing she might board a flight that was hijacked to Cuba, Cruz decided to stop flying altogether. This, combined with disagreements with the Tico label over the direction of her career, kept her isolated from the beginnings of the salsa movement that took shape under the Fania label.

After singing "Gracia Divina" in the opera Hommy, by Larry Harlow, and "Bemba colorá" with the Fania All Stars, it was time for Cruz to record a full-length album that would showcase her interpretive skills. Celia y Johnny proved just the trick.

Pacheco had been enjoying a long and successful music career. Since his early days as a percussionist in the Xavier Cougat Orchestra, the Dominican had learned a lot about style and rhythm. His unique sound — known as the "Pacheco Groove" — had turned him into a favorite, particularly among New York dancers, and among lovers of Afro-Caribbean music in general.

Pacheco, a founding member of the Fania label, had noticed that Cruz's early recordings on the Tico label with the Tito Puente Orchestra tended to limit her impressive voice, which he felt was not reaching its potential against the enormous sound of Puente's big band. Pacheco once told me, "Let me put it to you this way: Celia sounded good with a stick banging against a can. She didn't need all those instruments."

Singers such as Melón, Pete "El Conde" Rodríguez, and later, Héctor Casanova, achieved great success and acceptance in combination with the Pachecho sound. Pacheco understood that his resounding style would help to highlight Cruz's incomparable voice.

Paired with the Pacheco groove, the "Queen of Rumba" evolved, unleashing two of her greatest hits: "Toro mata" and "Quimbara." Both received wild acclaim among dancers, who immediately accepted her as the favorite on the growing salsa market, which was about to take the world by storm.

 



Side A
1. Quimbara
2. Toro Mata
3. Vieja Luna
4. El Paso del Mulo
5. Tengo el Idde

Side B
6. Lo Tuyo es Mental
7. Canto a la Habana
8. No Mercedes
9. El Tumbao y Celia
10. El Pregon del Pescador

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