Rating:
Genre:
Latin
Release Date: 05/23/2006
Putumayo's bread and butter lies in
Latin releases, and as they get bigger they also seem to get better at picking out a proper variety that can meld together into a coherent compilation while still retaining the ideal of being particularly worldly. Here, they do it again with an omnipresent groove. The pieces here clump pretty closely around the Cuban styles, but the bands are as far flung as one would expect from
Putumayo. The album opens with a slick number from
Raul Paz, a Cuban living in Paris. Senegalese
son follows quickly, performed flawlessly. Soon these are followed by a contemporary version of a
boogaloo (with hints of
Rob Thomas perhaps?), a proper old-school
salsa, and some updated
timba (from Sweden, no less). The first departure from straightforward Cuban sounds doesn't come until midway through the album, with the addition of a
soukous motive mixed into a strong
salsa from
Ricardo Lemvo (and largely in Lingala!). Right after that though, the departures from Cuba becomes stronger, with
los Pinguos, who slyly convert a bit of
Argentine folk into
reggae, and then into a more Cuban sound. The album finishes with a collection of more contemporary versions --
NG la Banda plays some more
timba,
Yerba Buena updates the New York sound a bit, and
Brooklyn Funk Essentials incorporate whatever they like. It's a nice album overall. The parts don't always make sense separately, but they fit together stylistically into a journey of Cuban music paradoxically more separable into time frames than into geographical frames.
~Adam Greenberg, All Music Guide