Who is the Queen of Latin Soul?
DB_Cooper
Manhatin' 7,823 Posts
I was just putting together some PBS highlights for a project at work and ran across this:
Now, I'm not deep on the subject of Latin soul, and I have to say, I'm unfamiliar with her work. Is she really the queen of Latin soul? And can one truly be called legendary if the vast majority of the populace has never heard of her?Independent Lens: La Lupe Queen of Latin Soul[/b]: INDEPENDENT LENS (ITVS) concludes its season with "La Lupe Queen of Latin Soul." Legendary Afro-Cuban pop singer Lupe Victoria Yoli was crowned "The Queen of Latin Soul" by New York's Latin music scene in the 1960s. Renowned for her emotional performances, La Lupe remains the quintessential bad girl, dying tragically, virtually unknown in 1992. Shot in Cuba, Puerto Rico and the U.S., the film tells her story through interviews and rare archival footage from the groundbreaking musical era.
Comments
YES.
Now someone else answer the Latin Soul question.
Allow me: You sound
whiI'm both.
latin soul = r&b style crooning in spanish, que no?
I'm pretty sure they're working that title off the title of her own album. And given that there wasn't exactly a ton of women singing Latin soul, I'm not sure who you'd put in here instead save for probably Celia Cruz (though I always associate her with salsa more than Latin soul).
it's
Considering the whole "cuties to the dancefloor, notsocuties to the kitchen" (polite paraphrase) getting equal billing on LPs with male stars would make her Queen of Latin Soul by default.
She has three. All three suck?
Thanks!
not bad....not exactly doo-doo nor mind boggling
J-Lo hells No. The Booty Though....
Gloria Estefan & The Miami Sound Machine......cool. She has some Lite Fm hits though.
- spidey
but for real, ladies singing latin soul is about as scarce as black dudes singing country music.
I like her version of fever though- at least the one from her "la reina" album.
I don't know who soulstrut would recommend but it would probably be someone who sold 200 copies and is still unknown to latin music fans in NYC.
Mongo y La Lupe lp.
"Vagabundo" is a good La Lupe soul cut.
Well, they should have, 'cause Latin-soul was a legit genre with artists who knew how to split the difference. I know they had to sell records, but that tag is just too confusing, like you're expecting a female Joe Bataan or something.
And I thought surf music was bad as far as that went ("soul surfin'" was a common misused catchphrase back in the early sixties, but that's another thread).
The concept of latin soul, to most latin fans (ie, the people that called La Lupe the queen of it), was a lot bigger than just guys like Bataan who sang in English and had soul-influenced arrangements.
I'm sure it is, and I wouldn't take that away from her. I just hate seeing genre names used twice for two different reasons (like "garage" - the 1960's brand of rock & roll that spawned punk, or a form of dance music??).
haha, I hear you. It can get confusing with the Garr-idge.
true. if you ever listen to this album:
the part where sid's talking to Lupe is funny. her voice is total over-the-top sexy. at least that's how I remember it.
India.
Violeta Peralta. (Hey, it's music i can say whatever I want!)
I thought La Lupe sang that Si Si No No song, but I guess not. Who was that, from back in the big Latin bands days? Anyway, I always thought of La Lupe as a little more novelty, like that Fever clip.