Yes, that's right. Your eyes are not deceiving you... RADIO MACONDO is back! And your ears won't deceive you either. Your feet will confirm everything when they start to move, and the smile on your face will provide absolute proof. For our big come-back bash, we've lined up contemporary salsa hits to make a true believer out of anyone who listens!
Latin
Radio Macondo Podcast Folgen
A weekly showcase of the greatest salsa, classic and new, plus Cuban son, with commentary on the music and artists.
Folgen von Radio Macondo Podcast
85 Folgen
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Folge vom 04.12.2008Radio Macondo 77 Pure Salsa both Classic and New
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Folge vom 01.12.2008Radio Macondo 76 Pure Salsa both Classic and NewRADIO MACONDO takes you into the new year, with the hottest weekly hour of music in podcasting: an hour of pure salsa, classic and new.
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Folge vom 09.09.2007RADIO MACONDO Podcast 75Hot salsa for every salsa-taste, from swingin' dance-floor power packers by Conjunto Colores, El Gran Combo, and Victor Cruz, to smoother, more romantically swingin' tunes from Jose Alberto, Lalo Rodriguez, and Michael Stuart. Then, a sampling of some of the fusion work going on in salsa, with a plena-flamenco fusion from Plena Libre, a conga-salsa-jazz fusion from Descarga Boricua, and a cumbia-salsa-compas fusion from Joe Arroyo. A little Cuban sound lovingly done by Colombian band Orquesta Sublime, then yet another Cuban homage from that classic '75 collaboration of Celia, Johnny, Justo, y Papo. Eddie Palmieri surprises once again, and we finish with a live number from Roberto Roena y su Apollo Sound.
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Folge vom 02.09.2007RADIO MACONDO Podcast 74A great lineup of mostly classics this time, and a great sampling of all the various styles of salsa. We start with another dance-floor hit from Chino Nunez, then we hear the song that launched Frankie Ruiz's career, the one song that puts him in the company of salsa's greatest. We hear rich performances from La Sonora Poncena, Cheo Feliciano, and Eddie Palmieri's orchestra, then a cover of Roberto Roena's classic "Parece Mentira" from Orquesta Tabaco y Ron. Next, a special look at one of salsa's supergroups--the 1975 collaboration of Celia Cruz, Johnny Pacheco, Justo Betancourt, and Papo Lucca that gave us "Recordando el Ayer," one of the finest albums from the Fania catalog. Then, the purely Cuban sound of Manuel Licea, and Africando delivering an homage to Cuban guaracha. And we close with La Sonora Dinamita from Colombia, in one of their early hits.