Merengue....???
batmon
27,574 Posts
Where to start?
Artists?
Vinyl History?
Im pretty sure most of the Latin collectros are usually doin Salsa, but what about Merengue?
Is it out in the field? Undiscovered Genre? Mostly CD?
Is there a "Golden Age" like NYC Salsa?
Stories pleez.
Comments
Also Joseito Mateo, Los Hijos del Rey, Johnny Ventura who also does a good que se sepa.
And if you like rootsy, Tatico is the shit
don't remember how they sound though.
Sayin.......why is that? Not on you O, but overall?
Is there no "romantic" era ala Salsa? No household name superstar?
New to America factor? Outside of NYC regional underexposure?
I recall workin security at Bronx Comm College and during the dances, the Latin music was 65/35 Salsa to Merengue. This was the early-mid 90's.
Louie Ramirez "El Merengue De Don Luis"
Rafael Labasta "San Antonio"
Joe Cuba "Mad Merengue"
there is a romantic era but its not cheesy lyrics and bad synth its just really fast and repetitive low quality late 80's merengue and that sound is what is reproduced today
you need it because that's what gets them dancing on the floor
the older stuff i like
johnny ventura has some great tracks that made me reconsider my opinion of merengue
you will be able to find a lot in the field
If you just are talking about bootleg CDs on blankets for mass consumption, then you can say the same for Salsa and Cumbia.
In the 60s Merengue took over from Mambo as the dominant big band sound, before Salsa. None of that is from DR and it's [strike]tepid[/strike] buttoned-down enough for Rey to file ;) But we are talking about stuff that females will dance to.
I would compare Merengue to Haitian Compa when it comes to looking for the vinyl. 90% of it is booted tape/CDs, but the stuff you would really want is out there on vinyl somewhere. And avoid covers with shiny shirts and perms.
I don't know about all of that, where are you getting this info from? For sure there was merengue in the 60s and it was getting play in NY, but taking over from mambo?! And none of it is from DR?! Wilfredo Vargas and Johnny Ventura, arguably the biggest names in the genre at the time, are both Dominican.
Yeah Johnny Ventura was a big star but he was liked for all styles, not just merengue. When I say DR merengue, I mean LPs with 9+ balls out Merengues on and 5 dudes in jumpsuits on the cover. You know what I mean. I think that's the stuff that batmon and Odub started discussing above.
I never heard slow Merengue. Not sayin it needs variants but just stating.
SC, I don't know if people in the city thought merengue was unsophisticated per se (boogaloo sure was seen that way and they played the shit out of it), but salsa was just a much more natural progression from mambo, cha cha cha, son, guaguanco, etc that its roots were already leading in that direction anyway. This is all speculation on my part though. Lord knows Puerto Ricans love them some merengue (present company excluded).
So he was passin?