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Latin Lounge
Tango, cumbia and son meet electronica in this
contemporary collection of chill-out grooves



$14.98
USD
 
1 Alacran    Reflejo de Luna • (Italy/Argentina)
2 Roberto Poveda    Sueño Mamá • (Cuba)
3 Bebe    Siempre Me Quedará • (Spain)
4 Sidestepper    Dame Tu Querer • (UK/Colombia)
5 Si*Sé    Mariposa (en Havana) • (USA/Dominican Republic)
6 Luiz de Aquino    Caminhos de Cuba • (Brazil)
7 Amparanoia    Don't Leave me Now • (Spain)
8 Wagner Pá & Brazuca Matraca    Folía • (Brazil/Spain)
9 Charanga Cakewalk    Carmela • (USA)
10 Federico Aubele    Esta Noche • (Argentina)
11 Deepak Chopra featuring Adriana Castelazo    In Love With You • (India/Mexico)
12 Andrés Linetzky & Ernesto Romeo    Sentimientos • (Argentina)
To hear sample tracks, select RealAudio or Windows Media format.

A remarkable revolution is taking place in Latin music these days, as electronica and remixing meet the more traditional rhythms of Argentinean tango, Afro-Cuban son, Brazilian bossa nova and Colombian cumbia. On Latin Lounge, artists such as Sidestepper, Si*Sé, Charanga Cakewalk and others prove that there can be a magical blend of modern musical trends and traditional Latin styles.

Among the better known groups featured on Latin Lounge is the UK/Colombia/Cuba collective Sidestepper, renowned for fusing electronics and traditional Afro-Caribbean rhythms.Their featured track, “Dame tu Querer”, is a dub-flavored love song recorded in Havana with Cuban vocalist Ronald Infante.

Exclusive to Latin Lounge is a previously unreleased remix of Si*Sé’s “Mariposa (en Havana).” Says lead singer and co-founder Carol C., “We’re a band from New York City and we try to combine all of its musical traditions including hip-hop beats, Latin rhythms and down-tempo electronic music because that’s what we hear every day of our lives.”

While Latin Lounge features several internationally known artists, it also highlights discoveries such as Bebe, a singer-songwriter whose recent collaboration with electronica DJ Carl Jean has made her a star in her native Spain. Another rising star is the Spanish band Amparanoia, a leading band in the mestizo (mixed) movement, so-called for its boundary-crossing blend of flamenco, Afro-Cuban music, hip-hop, electronica and other influences.

Roberto Poveda, a Cuban musician and composer based in Miami is a new voice whose subtle updating of traditional son will be heard by a wide audience for the first time on Latin Lounge. From Argentina come Andrés Linetsky and Federico Aubele who, along with Italian duo Alacrán, are each taking the tango-electronica fusions pioneered by Gotan Project in exciting new directions.

Two Europe-based Brazilian artists who make an appearance on Latin Lounge are Luiz de Aquino, who comes from São Paulo by way of Paris, and the eclectic Wagner Pa & Brazuca Matraca. A Rio de Janeiro native who has lived in Barcelona for more than twenty years, Pa mingles his own polyglot influences with the help of Spanish, Argentinean and Venezuelan musicians.

Rounding out the surprises on Latin Lounge are the updated cumbia and mambo flavors of the Austin, Texas group Charanga Cakewalk, and a refreshingly unexpected track in which Mexican singer Adriana Castelazo joins with alternative healing guru Deepak Chopra to give a seductive Latin remix flavor to lyrics based on ancient Indian love poems.

On the Putumayo collection Latin Groove we explored the upbeat side of this trend. Latin Lounge continues the journey, this time uniting tracks with a more chill out vibe. Latin Lounge is the latest in a series of successful Putumayo releases focusing on exciting new directions in down tempo electronica and world music that includes the collections World Lounge, Euro Lounge and Sahara Lounge.

Watch the flash ecard:  Putumayo Presents Latin Lounge

Watch the video: Wagner Pá & Brazuca Matraca - "Folía"

In 1984, when he was twenty years old, Wagner Pá left his native Rio de Janeiro to join his mother in Barcelona, where she worked for the Brazilian Consulate. He began DJ-ing at one of Barcelona’s most popular nightclubs, and worked with artists such as Macaco, Sergent Garcia and Manu Chao, who were beginning to develop what is now a sizzling mestizo music scene. In 2000, Pá started Brazuca Matraca. “Brazuca” is local slang for “Brazilian,” and “Matraca” is a noisemaker used in Carnaval. His band, which mingles Pá’s own polyglot influences with the stylings of Spanish, Argentinean and Venezuelan musicians, creates an exciting blend of Brazilian, Spanish and Latin music that reflects the multicultural melting pot of modern Barcelona.
A portion of the proceeds from the sale of this CD will be donated to Oxfam America in support of their development efforts in Latin America.

Catalog ID#: PUT-241