
the ghetto brothers - power fuerza, incl. 80 page booklet - truth & soul - cd

TS 015CD - 67669 - uscd - €16.50
Genre: Latin
1. Girl From The Mountain
2. There Is Something In My Heart
3. Got This Happy Feeling
4. Mastica Chupa Y Jala
5. You Say You Are My Friend
6. Viva Puerto Rico Libre
7. I Saw A Tear
8. Ghetto Brothers Power




Revered and incredibly rare 1972 Latin Rock album by South Bronx street-gang-turnedmusic- group gets deluxe reissue treatment, including remastered audio and extensive 80-page liner notes booklet, with rarely-seen photos and visual artifacts from gang
members, plus interviews with the group and cultural historians by Jeff “Chairman” Mao. TIP!!!
The South Bronx’s Ghetto Brothers, originally formed from the Melendez family unit (Benjy, Robert and Victor) who came to New
York in the 1950s from Puerto Rico. They had their share of incidents with violence and crime, but Benjy also pushed his crew
into uplift-the-community territory.
As Jeff “Chairman” Mao notes, By the early 70s Benjy’s social conscience was on the rise the result of which had the Ghetto
Brothers eradicating junkies and pushers from their neighborhood, cleaning up parks and garbage-strewn empty lots, and
participating in clothing drives and breakfast programs.”
In the early 70s, they brought another aspect to their legacy: musicianship. They quickly cooked up a potent, NYC-flavored
musical stew that gained the attention of local record store and record label owner Ismael Maisonave (Mary Lou Records / Salsa
Records). After agreeing to his invitation to put their music on tape, the group rehearsed furiously and gathered material. In the
summer of 1972, they were ready.
The album’s eight tracks were recorded in one day at Manhattan’s Fine Tone Studios, produced and engineered by Latin studio
maven Bobby Marin. Seven of the eight are originals written by Benjy and/or Victor Melendez. The result: a beautiful, absolutely
innocent audio snapshot by three brothers, their friends and a powerful gang of musical energy.
The original unit featured on Power Fuerza stopped performing together in the mid-’70s, yet an energized incarnation of the
Ghetto Brothers remains a steady-gigging unit to this day. Still a family affair, the current lineup features Benjy and Robert
Melendez (brother Victor passed away in 1995) as well as Benjy’s son Joshua on bass and Robert’s son Hiram on drums.
As guitarist Robert Melendez says “Once we started playing music, [people] didn’t see the colors. They were just there to feel
the vibe. To hear what you were saying… your voice and your guitar. It was only when you stopped the music that everything
came back