Thursday February 21 2013, 03:06:50 PM | Posted by FaniaDigital

ALL NEW LOUIE VEGA PRODUCTION

New York, NY - Fania Records announced today the release of Elements Of Life ‘Eclipse,’ a 2-disc album from Louie Vega’s critically acclaimed live orchestral project. The album is set for a worldwide release date of March 19, 2013, and is the first new artist album Fania is releasing in years. The first disc showcases 17 brand new tracks from Elements Of Life that tastefully traverse the sounds of Afrobeat, Jazz, Latin, R&B, Gospel, Soul, Blues, Brazilian and World Music all woven with the golden touch of Grammy Award winning Producer/Artist/DJ Louie Vega. The second disc includes “EOL Soulfrito” an homage to Fania Records through interpretations and remixes of classic Fania songs performed by the Elements Of Life in a 33-minute sound collage as well as six more bonus tracks. Louie Vega connected with the legendary Fania Records after doing the smash club remix of his uncle Hector Lavoe’s “Mi Gente” track back in 2008. Louie elaborates, “At that time I started working on my new Elements Of Life album. Fania was already aware of my previous E.O.L. albums and when they got wind, they wanted to hear it. Once they heard it, they were very interested in signing it. I was in awe of the idea. Things really would go full cycle being on Fania Records."

On Elements Of Life Eclipse, which was 4 ½ years in the making, Vega kept the style of the earlier albums (African, Jazz, Latin, World) but has added Soul, R&B, Gospel and Blues. The lyrics are deeper now and are bringing more conscious messages to the world. Joining Elements Of Life on this album are singers Lisa Fischer and Cindy Mizelle, and poets: Ursula Rucker and Oveous Maximus as well as percussionist Luisito Quintero (Vega produced his last two albums). Singer/songwriter, and global DJ Anané has blossomed since her full length release of Ananésworld and brought in more of her Cape Verdean influences and has also experimented more with the R&B/Soul sounds which she’s made her own on songs like the Roy Ayers penned “You Came Into My Life” and the Cesaria Evora classic “Sodade.” Lisa and Cindy have brought in their Gospel and R&B influences, and have even experimented with Jazz, Funk, and House. They performed backgrounds on live shows for many years for artists like Luther Vandross, the Rolling Stones, Steely Dan, Bruce Springsteen, Whitney Houston, and Mary J. Blige to name a few. For years Vega wanted to do a project and take Lisa and Cindy from the background to the forefront as leads. Rounding out the stellar talent are poets Ursula Rucker and Oveous Maximus who bring their storytelling and poetry in the form of spoken word to E.O.L. As Vega states, “It was all perfect for the new album.” Ongoing themes for the new album are about reaching out to our young generation, and paying homage to women. Vega adds, “I feel in these times we need songs like this to help inspire moves.”

Vega concludes, “It’s a true honor for me to be the first new artist album signed to Fania Records in years. It really comes full circle now, being able to be on the label my uncle Hector Lavoe was on and the Fania All Stars who are also great inspirations for me. Fania Records is to Latin music what Motown is to R&B and Soul, so to be even a small page in this encyclopedia of music is a dream come true for me.”


Tuesday January 29 2013, 01:54:03 PM | Posted by FaniaDigital

Puerto Rican born Jose Cheo Feliciano moved to New York City in 1952 to work as a percussionist. Upon the recommendation of Tito Rodriguez, Feliciano’s illustrious singing career started in the 1960’s with the Joe Cuba sextet and then later with the Alegre All Stars and Eddie Palmieri. In 1971, Feliciano signed a recording contract with Vaya (a Fania subsidiary) and became a member of the Fania All Stars.

Sentimiento, tu” (1980) was Feliciano’s last album with the Fania label and the third in a series of self-produced albums (Mi Tierra y Yo , 1977 and Estampas, 1979) recorded in Puerto Rico. The title, “Sentimiento, tu” , corresponds to one of Feliciano’s trademark phrases often used in his improvisations. It also is indicative of the album’s content. The songs in “Sentimiento, tu” are sung with, and are about, sentimiento (feelings). Most of the compositions in this recording were by the legendary composer Tite Curet Alonso (1926-2003), someone who shared Feliciano’s sentimiento for the people. Feliciano, with the help of Alonso, was able to deliver provocative songs of solidarity without the need of an explicit moral or political message. For example, the song “Juan Albañil” is about a brick layer who can't afford to live in the homes and condominiums that he constructs due to their high prices and society’s sociological prejudices. “Sobre Una Tumba Humilde” compares the mourning of a poor family to that of a wealthy one. The poor cannot afford an engraved marble headstone but does offer a genuine and humble “sentimiento” represented in the song as a flor de llanto (a “flower of tears”). “Lamentación Campesina” is a story about the jíbaro (the rural and poor Puerto Rican). This later song is Alonso’s contribution to the history of Lamentos in Latin music. The composers of Lamentos provided people the opportunity to vent their frustrations and show their pain through singing or crying. In “Lamentación Campesina”, the jíbaro is depicted as a stranger in his own land and is artfully lamented.   

Sentimiento also is a key ingredient in the immortal style of ballad know as boleros, and Feliciano is known throughout Latin America as one of its best interpreters. “Amada Mia” is the only bolero on the album but it is one of Feliciano’s greatest bolero hits. In his approach to boleros, Feliciano was influenced by Los Panchos, Tito Rodriguez, Gilberto Monroig, and Daniel Santos. He has a sensual and unique voice, whose tone can become low and thick but always melodic. 

“Sentimiento, tu” has a larger orchestral composition and sound than the standard salsa instrumentation. The string section and the vibraphone of Luís Ramirez provides an occasional lush background that acts as a nice contrast to the harsher unison sound of the trombones. In spite of the many instruments, soloists are allowed to solo, such as Juancito Torres in “Salí Porque Salí” and the beautiful vibraphonist Louie Ramirez in “Noche sensacional”.

“Lamentación Campesina”, “Castillos de Arena”, and “Cuento Número Uno” stand out in “Sentimiento, tu” for the complexity of their arrangements, the interesting rhythmic changes, and the contrasts of musical textures. For example, “Lamentación Campesina” changes between jíbaro music (aguinaldo) and Afro-Cuban styles in a seamless fashion. The use of the cuatro (a 10-string, guitar-like instrument) and the sound of the Coqui (a small frog found only in Puerto Rico) serve to emphasize the song’s theme. “Castillos de Arena” starts as a Cuban son and quickly becomes a Puerto Rican bomba, gaining momentum on different levels. “Cuento Número Uno” changes rhythmically at different times—and there are even Brazilian references, created by Roberto Roena through the use of the cuica (a Brazilian friction drum often used in samba music). 

Feliciano’s versatility as a singer, as well as his street flavor and ability to improvise, are all evident in “Sentimiento, tu” The fact that Feliciano was a percussionist at an early age must have something to with the mastery of rhythm he developed with his voice. “Sentimiento, tu” was the culmination of an important period in Feliciano’s musical career—and it is still one of his best. 

Written by Dr. Gregory Pappas

Amada Mia / Cheo Feliciano

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Tuesday July 17 2012, 11:07:06 AM | Posted by FaniaDigital

New York, NY – June 30, 2012 – After more than sixty years bringing the national instrument of Puerto Rico into prominence around the world, the internationally renown guitarist often referred to as the King of the Cuatro, Yomo Toro passed away peacefully on Saturday, June 30, 2012 at 11:40 pm after more than a month in a New York hospital due to kidney failure.

Surrounded in a spiritual embrace of love and music from his many family and friends who kept round the clock vigil over the fragile 78 year old musician, Yomo spent his final days in good cheer as if bidding farewell to the many family and friends who daily made music his medicine. Yomo Toro leaves behind his wife Minerva of 31 years of marriage, his first born daughter Denise Toro, sisters Lydia, Iris, Mirza, and Milagros Toro joined by five grand children: Miriam Olivera, Martin Olivera, Denise Pinedo, Tiffany Pinedo & Denise Patricia Velez and three great grandchildren: Shaun Donate, Cloe Rodriguez and Martin Olivera. His brothers Juan, Angel, and Arcangel Toro were also by his side.

From the first twangs of his small ten stringed “cuatro” guitar hair raising moments ran through arms, backs and necks as the diminutive Yomo Toro vamped, arpegioed and soared through musical genres from his native Puerto Rican plenas, seis and bombas to salsa, jazz, and rock rounded by classical guitar and Flamenco music. The virtuoso interpreted eclectic styles through cherubic fingers that flew through frets before languishing on lengthy solos weaved on Spanish songs.

The “Yomo Toro Variety Show” over New York's Channel 41 had a decade long television run during the late '60s into the '70s that brought him to the attention of Jerry Masucci and Johnny Pacheco co-owners of the legendary Fania label where he eventually joined their world-famous showcase band, the Fania All-Stars. Especially noteworthy was the year 1969 when Yomo recorded the critically acclaimed salsa album “Tribute to Arsenio” with the Larry Harlow Orchestra.

When guitarist Roberto Garcia wanted Yomo to sub for him on a Christmas album Pacheco was recording with a new group, he asked Yomo to bring the popular electric guitar of the times, but, as Yomo tells the story, when he heard “Christmas” he grabbed his cuatro instead. When Hector LaVoe saw the instrument he immediately thought of his mentor and Yomo’s friend the great folkloric singer Chuito de Bayamon before the pair compared popular songs of the season. Through Hector’s musical expertise and Yomo’s virtuosity the 1972 release of the classic Asalto Navideño with Willie Colon became a best-selling Fania classic.

In the '70s, '80s and '90s Toro's career careened like a freight train. He appeared on over 150 albums, recording more than 20 solo albums for Fania, Island, Rounder and Green Linnet Records. He returned to television and film, playing in commercials for several major international companies, over television shows the likes of “Sesame Street” and “The Ghost of Father Fohner” while working on the soundtracks for several films, including “Crossover Dreams” with Ruben Blades and Woody Allen's “Bananas.”

Funeral arrangements and viewing will be announced shortly. On behalf of the Toro family we wish to thank everyone for their well wishes and outpouring of love and emails and especially for their request for privacy during this time.

Yomo Toro - Born Víctor Guillermo Toro Vega Ramos Rodríguez Acosta - July 26, 1933 – June 30, 2012


Monday July 2 2012, 11:59:15 AM | Posted by FaniaDigital

In 1974, during the heyday of the New York salsa explosion, the Fania All Stars were invited to perform in front of 80,000 people at a stadium in Zaire, Africa. Featuring exquisite performances by Celia Cruz, Héctor Lavoe and the All Stars' many other virtuoso players and vocalists, the concert was captured on film. Unfortunately, this precious footage has been available only in substandard versions, quickly becoming a rare collector's item.

Now, Fania is proud to offer a definitive edition of this musical treasure. The brand new edition of Fania All Stars - Live In Africa includes a remastered DVD of the original film, as well as a CD with the audio of the concert.

Fans who are already familiar with this footage will be delighted with the improved quality. The colors are lush and vibrant as a young Cheo Feliciano belts out "El Ratón" and Roberto Roena performs his legendary percussion solo on the electrifying "Ponte Duro." The sound is also vastly improved - allowing us to enjoy the magnificent coro section of Héctor Lavoe, Ismael Miranda, Ismael Quintana, Cheo Feliciano and Santitos Colón in all its grand detail. The opening "Químbara" with a radiant Celia Cruz, is in itself worth the price of admission.

Better yet, this new edition includes bonus footage that was not present in the original release of the movie. Salsa aficionados will be moved to tears by these images and sounds: Héctor Lavoe and Ismael Quintana singing together a capella; the All Stars rehearsing for the big show in broad daylight; Johnny Pacheco signing autographs and laughing with his African fans.

Restored to its former glory, Live In Africa captures a particularly soulful moment in the history of Latin music. Don't miss this one.

Click here to buy Fania All Stars - Live in Africa CD/DVD Combo Today »


Tuesday May 22 2012, 12:20:58 PM | Posted by FaniaDigital

Junior González, the amazing Puerto Rican sonero who made salsa history with the orchestra of Larry Harlow - recording seminal salsa hits such as "La Cartera" - passed away on May 10th. He was only 63. Born in Coamo, Puerto Rico, Junior became a part of salsa lore in the '70s, when he was chosen as the vocalist to replace Ismael Miranda in Larry Harlow's group. A singer of unique timing and precision, Junior had no problem standing up to the challenge. He survived the end of the salsa heyday and recorded a number of successful salsa romántica albums. Active until the end of his life, he will be forever remembered through the soulful recordings he left behind.


Wednesday April 25 2012, 03:47:09 PM | Posted by FaniaDigital

The year was 1969. Salsa pioneer Eddie Palmieri had just succumbed to the commercial trend of the moment and released Champagne, perhaps the best of all boogaloo albums. But change was in the air. It was time to bring Latin music closer to political reflection and social conscience. It was time to record Justicia - a salsa classic that Fania is now re-releasing with remastered sound and in-depth liner notes.

Justicia was the first in a series of grand statements that Palmieri would release through the '70s - albums like Superimposition, Vámonos Pa'l Monte and The Sun of Latin Music. Interestingly enough, he chose to add a layer of lyrical and thematic depth to his music without sacricifing the explosive danceability that characterized his previous work (this is, after all, the man who cooked up "Azúcar," one of the funkiest salsa jams of all time.)

The lineup remained consistent, too. The great Ismael Quintana on vocals, the rock-solid Manny Oquendo on bongó and a smoldering brass section with Lewis Kahn, José Rodrigues and 'Chocolate' Armenteros, among others. Justicia made history through its defiant title track, as well as a sinuous version of Ignacio Piñeiro's "Lindo Yambú" that became a staple in Palmieri's concert appearances. A classic album from the golden era of salsa,Justicia is now available both as a physical CD and a digital download.

Click here to buy Justicia as a CD or digital download today »


Monday March 26 2012, 05:01:44 PM | Posted by FaniaDigital

One of the great albums of the classic salsa era is finally seeing the light of day again. Fania is proud to reissue Cuban sonero Justo Betancourt's 1972 classic Pa'Bravo Yo with remastered sound and extensive liner notes. Produced by Larry Harlow and recorded with an all-star lineup that includes Roberto Roena on bongó, Andy González on bass and coros by Yayo El Indio and Adalberto Santiago, this is the definitive Justo Betancourt album.

The opening track is also the singer's greatest hit: the smoldering "Pa'Bravo Yo," written by Fania labelmate Ismael Miranda. As performed by Betancourt, the track delivers a lesson in vocal timing and Afro-Caribbean swing. Other highlights include a wonderfully somber "Psicología" and a lush version of Tite Curet Alonso's "Guaguancó Ta Moderno."

An indispensable album of the '70s salsa explosion, now available both as a physical CD and a digital download.

Click here to buy Pa'Bravo Yo today »


Wednesday December 7 2011, 05:01:19 PM | Posted by FaniaDigital

It was in Old San Juan’s Bombonera restaurant in 1977 when I spotted the traditional straw hat and signature daisheke on the man sitting at the counter. C. Curet Alonso was holding a notepad and tape recorder when I sat beside him. He was reserved, diffident and guarded until we began to talk about Ismael Rivera’s “Esto Sí Es Lo Mío.” That’s when a glint appeared in his eyes and a smile crossed his face. We bonded talking about Maelo, the plena and the bomba, poverty, race, politics, religion and music.

Curet defined a revolutionary period in Latin music. His compositions brought out the best in the performer. Masterworks included Héctor Lavoe’s “Periódico de Ayer” or “Juanito Alimaña,” Cheo Feliciano’s “Anacaona,” Pete El Conde’s “La Abolición,” Andy Montañez’s “El Eco del Tambor,” Celia Cruz’s “Isadora” and La Lupe’s “La Tirana.”

Curet’s name was ubiquitous, gracing hundreds of album credits by many of the top Latin music artists of the ‘60s, ‘70s, ‘80s and ‘90s. He penned more than 2,000 songs, spawning and jump-starting the artistic careers of many - from La Lupe and Cheo Feliciano to Frankie Ruiz. He was the most sought after composer in tropical music - Curet’s songs were guaranteed hits, revered as classic today.

“You had to take a number and wait on line,” Rubén Blades told the L.A. Times when Curet passed away. “His songs could revive any career, so there was always a fight to get new material from Tite,” recalled the Panamanian singer/songwriter whose interpretation of Curet’s “Plantación Adentro” also hit the top of the charts.

Curet helped father the nascent salsa movement that was marking time in clave through the streets of Puerto Rico and the Latin New York. His words inspired hope and faith, solace and joy during a time of social upheaval. Through more than 2,000 tunes, Curet became the musical narrator of current events and national pride, romance and religion. He reflected the face of a community that was in dire need of answers.

His talent for composing extended beyond the borders of the Caribbean - dipping into Mexico, Venezuela, Paraguay, Spain and Brazil. He credits the latter for receiving his best musical training from the “sorcerers of el semitono" (the half tone). His merengue for Los Hijos del Rey “Yo Me Dominicaniso” made much noise, and Tony Croatto’s version of Curet’s “Cucubano,” became a hit, later recorded by Menudo. From Chucho Avellanet to Nelson Ned, Tite Curet Alonso has been a pivotal figure in the repertoire of many Latin superstars.

This compilation brings to light the music of one of Puerto Rico’s most important composers of the 20th Century after a fourteen-year absence. This 30-tune double CD set, featuring some of Curet’s most beloved works, is a worthy addition to anyone’s collection. His songs were unavailable since 1995 due to a separate performance rights society contract that Curet signed, building an unnecessary layer of bureaucracy between the radio stations, publishing rights organizations and composers.

Notes music writer Jaime Torres Torres of El Nuevo Dia: “An entire generation was deprived of the genius of this notable and creative songwriter."

This compilation reflects several of the composer’s core themes. Curet was most proud of his writing skills, in particular his journalistic ability, often pointing to his scant use of adjectives in crafting a hit number. Tite Curet wrote for newspapers and magazines, hosted radio shows, and later wrote screenplays for stage and television, as well as children’s songs and hymns.

He studied to be a pharmacist, but through an uncle who had a print press found journalism insetad - writing columns and essays that he later pointed to as fodder for his musical muse. Curet worked almost all his life for the U.S. Postal Service, never relying entirely on the music business, even at the height of his popularity. He was proud that way. A proud Afro-Boricua negro, he wrote his roots on paper and abandoned his heart to song.

His was a hard life. He was born in the pueblo of Guayama, Puerto Rico on February 26, 1926. Curet’s father taught Spanish and played in the municipal band of Simón “Pin” Madera. Couples and singles paraded in plazas across from churches and government steeples where gazebos kept musicians out of the direct sunlight.

However, his parents divorced taking the young Curet to Barrio Obrero. Those mean streets around the hoods of Tokio, El Fangito, Tras Talleres and Puerta de Tierra were the last forts of proletariat resistance while breeding some of the Island’s biggest talents. Tito Rodríguez, who later recorded Curet’s hit “Tiemblas,” lived down the block from the fledging songwriter - as did bandleader Rafael Cortijo, featured on “Se Escapó Un León,” singer Gilberto Monroig, and the internationally renowned composer Rafael Hernández.

A seasoned man in a time of resistance to societal norms, Curet later witnessed the worldwide rage against Vietnam and the tsunami of civil and social change heralded by the ‘60s and ‘70s.

This intense, historical climate shaped Curet’s life and work.

Curet studied music as an adult. When asked for a song, he’d study the voice, tone and timbre of the singer, highlighting the phrasing, diction and enunciation. His verses were measured and restrained while bursting with assertive irony, wit and conflict. His study of music theory and solfegio helped him come up with melodies, lyrical meters and musical arrangements that augmented the work of arrangers. Artists who retained him were also subject to his scrutiny, part of the magic and power included in the creative process of the song.

Curet’s mother was a seamstress, but early on was also a voice for women's rights. Curet was able to write for women with a sensibility and feminine perspective that changed the tone of love songs - from wrist cutting torch songs to empowering tunes of self-reliance.

“La Tirana” is no shrinking violet song about "I’ll love you no matter how bad you treat me." This is a woman putting her pantalones on and saying something along the lines of “when you left me, I hit the jackpot." Originally written for a male singer, it was turned around into an empowering act of unapologetic aggression by Lupe Victoria Yolí. The 1968 hit sparked Curet’s commercial career and recharged La Lupe’s stardom. “Puro Teatro” followed. Curet's first break had happened in 1965, with Joe Quijano’s interpretation of “Efectivamente.”

His sympathetic admiration for singer Cheo Feliciano led to Curet’s pivotal role as a producer on the singer’s return as a solo artist. The subsequent 1971 Fania recording produced five hits, including the standard “Anacaona.”

Through Cheo, Curet told the folk tale of the valiant “Anacaona,” a taíno queen from the Dominican Republic who speaks of a long awaited struggle for her elusive freedom from slavery. Knowing this would be a passionate metaphor for Cheo’s own dependence, Curet writes “Anacaona” in the singer’s own style - thus making the number his. Pianist Larry Harlow performs one of the finest solos of his career, accompanied by Orestes Vilató on timbales. The great Louie Ramírez takes a fluid vibes solo, joined by Bobby Valentín on bass, Johnny Pacheco’s rhythmic conga drive and Johnny Rodríguez’s forceful cowbell for a laid-back yet aggressively swinging, history making session.

Richie Viera, who grew up in his father’s record store, recalls the many hours that Tite Curet spent in a backroom where he would write his newspaper column and songs: “Everyday he would come in with a big bag of plantain, alcapurrias or bacalaítos. He’d bring enough for everyone before sitting in the back office at an old typewriter. I’d watch him write as a line of one song would inspire the beginning of another. He would throw his head back and start to sway.”

Africanized nationalistic dignity is a recurring theme for Curet, who wrote provocatively on the struggles of a mulatto culture trying to progress and thrive within an American structure. Pete 'El Conde' Rodríguez said it best in “La Abolición”: the abolition of slavery does not mean freedom.

With Ismael Rivera’s 1975 hit “Caras Lindas,” Curet parades the multi-colored faces of the various tribes brought over to the Island. He notes their pain in verses that cut across social class, race and gender: Las caras lindas de mi raza prieta/Tienen de llanto, de pena y dolor.

Rivera makes “Caras Lindas” an anthem, phrasing verses in his rhythmic vocal style accompanied by an arrangement with blues riffs on the trombones.

Curet combats the social issues of his time with lyrical laments within a dance format. Once, his friends Rafael Viera and Franklin Hernández introduced singer and musician Billy Concepción to Curet in a restaurant. Concepción was blacklisted by the music industry and couldn’t find work. A father of six, he recounts the overwhelming feeling of having the world on his shoulders. Curet immediately took his pen and wrote “Lamento de Concepción” on a napkin. Concepción eleva la vista al cielo/Va gritando, hay niños que mantener - expressing the universal feeling of impotence at not being able to support his family.

Billy Concepción left Puerto Rico for New York, rescued by Cortijo, who took him on tour. Roberto Roena’s take on this tune has a deceiving, funky swing - sandwiched between pastoral samba passages that betray the tragic nature of this tale.

“Galera Tres” is a tale of injustice behind the justice system. A young Ismael Miranda demonstrates his street credibility on this protest song against prison violence. “Galera Tres” appeared first in a Marvin Santiago recording without Curet’s name. The composer credited Santiago’s wife, enabling her to receive royalties while Marvin was incarcerated.

Curet wrote many songs celebrating life, drums and music. “Evelio y la Rumba” is also included here, joining other songs such as “El Primer Montuno,” performed by the Andy Harlow band. “La Esencia del Guaguancó” as played by the Willie Rosario orchestra rejoices in this Cuban rhythm.

Curet’s religious compositions embrace “Tengo El Idde” (I have protection), with Celia Cruz and Johnny Pacheco warning haters about their spiritual shield. Curet’s words reflect the sacred rituals of the poor communities.

In matters of the heart, Curet can sound jilted, as in Héctor Lavoe's “Periódico de Ayer,” or vengeful - like in Bobby Valentín's “Aquella Mujer.” Even "Piraña" rages against yet another woman - reviled, and yet desired. Just as quickly as he condemns the female sex, Curet writes the lusty “Las Mujeres Son De Azúcar,” recorded by Sonora Ponceña.

Blanca Rosa Gil belts out her love song of strength in “Fue Por Mi Bien” with such passion that you almost feel sorry for the guy she’s breaking up with. The lush and languid arrangement behind Blanca’s cry for friendship to replace lost love puts the composer in the female psyche of platonic reconciliation. Sophy’s upbeat take of “Amor y Tentación” is flirty, coy, and free-spirited.

In his later years, Tite Curet Alonso left Puerto Rico to be with family in Baltimore, Maryland. On August 5, 2003 he died of a heart attack. He was 77. The Institute of Puerto Rican Culture gave him a hero’s wake. He was buried in the Santa María Magdalena de Pazzis cemetery in San Juan. Rubén Blades suspended his farewell tour so that he could attend the funeral. Cheo Feliciano, one of his closest friends, served as one of the many pallbearers.

Some people believe that, just like Puerto Rico's native tree frog (el coquí), Tite Curet Alonso died when he could no longer feel the warmth of his beloved little island.

Compiled by Nelson Abreu. Written by Aurora Flores, writer & bandleader of Zon del Barrio. Edited by Ernesto Lechner.

Click here to buy Tite Curet Alonso - Alma De Poeta as a digital download or on CD today »


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