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Baila Baila Baila: 1943-1948
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Album: Baila Baila Baila: 1943-1948
# Song Title   Time
1)    Tra la La
2)    Almendra - (live)
3)    Llego Dieguito
4)    ?Qui?n Par? la Rumba?
5)    Bata de Oll?, La
6)    Quili Quilito, A
7)    Peleona, La
8)    Llora Timbero
9)    Tierra Va Tembl
10)    Cocinero, Cocinero
11)    Mara?on, El
12)    G?elele Se Va
13)    Bim Bam Bum
14)    Son con Son
15)    Cabildo
16)    Coco
17)    Chacharich?
18)    Z?mbala
19)    Ri?, No Llora M?
20)    Vuelve Hacia Mi
21)    Nague
22)    Mango Mangue
 

Album: Baila Baila Baila: 1943-1948
# Song Title   Time
1)    Tra la La
2)    Almendra - (live)
3)    Llego Dieguito
4)    ?Qui?n Par? la Rumba?
5)    Bata de Oll?, La
6)    Quili Quilito, A
7)    Peleona, La
8)    Llora Timbero
9)    Tierra Va Tembl
10)    Cocinero, Cocinero
11)    Mara?on, El
12)    G?elele Se Va
13)    Bim Bam Bum
14)    Son con Son
15)    Cabildo
16)    Coco
17)    Chacharich?
18)    Z?mbala
19)    Ri?, No Llora M?
20)    Vuelve Hacia Mi
21)    Nague
22)    Mango Mangue
 
Product Description
Product Details
Performer Notes
  • Includes liner notes by Frank M. Figuroa.
  • Audio Remasterer: Charlie Crump.
  • Harlequin's Baila Baila Baila is a handy collection of radio transcription discs by Machito & His Afro-Cubans which were produced by the World Broadcasting System during the years 1943-1948. It also contains a 1942 Decca recording that features vocalist Miguelito Vald?s, who was formerly heard with Xavier Cugat's orchestra. It just so happens that the material on this disc fills a gap in the time line of Proper's four-CD Machito box set Ritmo Caliente, so Baila Baila Baila would complement that set, as well as Pablo's essential Machito collection, Mucho Macho. Anyone desiring a hefty helping of great, vintage Afro-Cuban dance music laced with bebop could own all three editions with a minimum of overlap. The mid-'40s proved a transitional period for Machito, as his Cuban drummers and singers gradually began to interact with the vibrant new ideas of early modern jazz. Vocals are credited to Machito's sister Graciela P?rez Grillo and Otilio Gal?ndez, with piano solos by Joe Loco. Harlequin's Baila Baila Baila comes with informative liner notes by vocalist and Latin American musicologist Frank M. Figueroa. "Baila" traces directly to the Portuguese term "Bailar" which means "to dance." Interestingly, the word is also applied to a type of dance music that is very popular in Sri Lanka, where, as in the Caribbean, Portuguese colonists influenced the culture of the indigenous people. ~ arwulf arwulf
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