
v/a - long live boogaloo - secret stash records - vinyl

SSR 286LP - 65169 - us2lp - €24.99
New Copy
Genre: Latin
1. Sister Sue
2. Mias Boogaloo
3. Funky Big Feet
4. Chicken and Booze
5. The Boogie Man
6. Take A Trip
7. We Belong Together
8. Bataola Boogaloo
9. Petes Boogaloo
10. Funky Shing A Ling
11. Dance The Boogaloo
12. Lucys Spanish Harlem
13. Keep The Faith
14. Bes That Way
15. Boogaloo Baby
16. Ritmo Moderno
17. Cookin with A & J
18. Straw Boss
19. Marilu
20. Boogaloo Sabrosa
21. Lost In The Jungle
22. Right On Pretty Mama




Double LP compilation of rare and hard to find Boogaloos. Each track has been selected with the help of veteran Boogaloo producer Bobby Marin. To help tell the story of the untimely demise of the genre, Secret Stash enlisted the services
of legendary concert promoter and illustrator Izzy Sanabria (the man
responsible for the artwork on most of Fania’s releases) to write liner notes.
Additionally, all of the artwork for the album is comprised of rehashed
versions of Sanabria’s now famous Boogaloo concert posters of the 60s.
As always, each had- numbered, hand assembled double LP set includes a
free download of the entire album and a re-sealable dust bag.
In the mid 1960s Latin teenagers in New York’s Spanish Harlem
neighborhood created a new style of music called Latin boogaloo. The sound was a mix of the Cuban music they grew up with and American R&B like James Brown and Hank Ballard. It quickly caught on and before long; the young purveyors of this new sound were taking business from the likes of Tito Puente, Tito Rodriguez, and Edie Palmieri. Soon the established acts reluctantly joined the craze and recorded a smattering of Boogloos. However, many of them were not happy about it. In general they felt it was beneath them. Eventually a small group of the most powerful people in the Latin music business conspired to kill off the Boogaloo and make
way for the burgeoning Salsa craze. Concert promoters, DJs, and venues were bribed to turn away any and all Boogaloo business. As soon as it came, it left...