With only six albums to its credit and less
than nine years of existence, Colombia 's Sonora
Carruseles has
already perfected a trademark sound that is
cherished by salsa lovers all over the world.
There's some seriously powerful stuff to be
found in this album: spidery piano lines, tight
poly rhythms, explosive brass riffs, staccato
cowbell patterns and impossibly nasal choruses
that are just hard to resist. Carruseles pays
a moving tribute to the spirit of old, hardcore
salsa, while at the same renewing this all but-forgotten
style with the benefits of digital technology.
It's
a fitting continuation to the legacy of Discos
Fuentes, the label responsible for the development
of Colombian tropical music through seminal
acts such as Fruko Y Sus Tesos, Latin Brothers,
Los Corraleros de Majagual and Sonora Dinamita.
It was the company's veteran musical director,
the legendary Mario 'Pachanga' Rincon, who dreamed
up the concept of Carruseles, a band whose mission
would be to re-record classic sides from the
salsa heyday of the '70s, thus preserving them
for a new generation of devoted fans.
Mr.
Pachanga's dream became a reality, and Carruseles
turned out to be the most exciting band to come
out of Colombia in decades. Led by the rhythmically
gifted talent of Manolo Puerto, and boasting
an illustrious gallery of guest singers that
includes Gabino Pampini, Harold Pelaez, Marihno
Paz y Daniel Marmolejo, Carruseles is a terrifying
machinery of non-stop swing. Not content with
exploring the golden age of salsa, it has also
revamped the sweetly nostalgic dance craze known
as the boogaloo, and even found time to delve
into bouncy cumbia territory through a series
of delectable medleys.
Now,
Carruseles has assembled all of its greatest
hits in one single album. A luxurious affair,
really. The ideal party disc. Listening to the
rollicking "Arranca en Fa" and the
infectious "Micaela," you find yourself
wishing for more Carruseles albums, more resurrected
nuggets from the past, more bewitching tumbaos
and lightning speed solos. The party has finally
begun. It's too late to stop now.