The Conga Kings – The Conga Kings (2000)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 1:02:56 minutes | 1,33 GB | Genre: Jazz
Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks.com | Digital booklet | © Chesky Records
Chesky Records proudly presents three of the world’s greatest conga players’Candido Camero, Carlos “Patato” Valdes and Gionvanni Hidalgo’in The Conga Kings, a breathtaking Latin jazz summit. Renowned for their distinctive styles and blending of Afro-Cuban and Jazz rhythms, the three legendary congueros showcase their uncanny sense of groove on songs like “Tumbando Caña” and the traditional “Avisale A Mi Contrario.” Bongos, bass, tres, flute and vocals accompany the congueros, each of whom performs on multiple drums.
“The richly layered mix provides a complex foundation for an intricate sound reminiscent of Arsenio Rodriguez at his best. The Conga Kings bears repeated listening just to comprehend the nuanced interplay of this unrivaled percussive triumvirate.” – Rhythm Magazine
Between Candido, Giovanni Hidalgo and Carlos “Patato” Valdes, the entire history of Afro-Cuban music is represented, and as conga players they are peerless. The sound of this recording is most intriguing, done at St. Peter’s Episcopal Church/NYC with one microphone. Though the sound is thin of presence it is fully balanced and rich: feel free to turn it up and kick in the sub-woofer. Bassist Guillermo Edgehill, tres players Nelson Gonzalez and John Benthal, the great flute player Mauricio Smith, percussionists Jose Francisco Valdes (claves) and Joe Gonzalez (bongos) and three singers are in the mix, but they never get in the way of the kings. Where the conga men are front and center throughout, it is the brilliant veteran Smith who shines just as bright. His spare flute floats over the coro and clave rhythm with ostinato tres on the endless jam “Tumbando Cana,” easy tres montuno with Smith’s ultra-melodicism is effortless during “Guaguanco Pa’ las Tumbadoras,” while the sung son “Nague” repeats the title incessantly while Smith’s solo is as piquant and poignant as it gets. Overblown harmonics and fluttering flute informs the “Duet II” with Patato. Edgehill is also quite good, leading the percussionists with ostinato on the “Descarga de Los Reyes,” and engaging in call and response with Candido during “Duet III.” “Tuna Se Quemo” is the most out and out, montuno braised descarga, with a wonderful tres solo from Gonzalez. The cuts featuring vocals include the delicate yet deliberate repeated line of “Elube Chango,” and the tres buoyed, lighter “Duet I; Temporal” (not really a duet) with insistent conga. Each percussionist gets solo space on two cuts; “Avisale a Mi Contrario” also uses a repeated vocal line with clave rhythm, bass and individual spotlights, while the “Grand Finale” has each player soloing, quite melodic in his own way, then together in a six/eight slow burn. Considering there are as many as ten conga drums going at once, the sonic reproduction is remarkably distinct. The music is firmly rooted in tradition, exciting from start to finish, and a perfect vehicle for students to learn the authentic rhythms which these three masters have led their lives by.
Tracklist:
01 – Tumbando Caña
02 – Elube Chango
03 – Guaguancó Pa’ Las Tumbadoras
04 – Nagüe
05 – Avísale A Mi Contrario
06 – Tuna Se Quemó
07 – Descarga De Los Reyes
08 – Duet I: Temporal
09 – Duet II
10 – Duet III
11 – Conga Kings Grand Finale
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mqs.link_CngaKingsTheCngaKings2000HDTracks2496.part2.rar