℗ 2020 Craft Recordings., Distributed by Concord.
Released | October 23, 2020 |
Originated | 1970 |
Duration | 35m 54s |
Record Label | Fania |
Catalogue No. | FNA00157 |
Genre | Latin |
Barretto Power
Ray Barretto
Available in 192 kHz / 24-bit, 96 kHz / 24-bit AIFF, FLAC high resolution audio formats
1.1
|
Oye La Noticia
Ray Barretto |
5:25 | |||
1.2
|
Perla Del Sur
Ray Barretto |
5:40 | |||
1.3
|
Right On
Ray Barretto |
2:40 | |||
1.4
|
De Qué Te Quejas Tú
Ray Barretto |
4:05 | |||
1.5
|
Y Dicen
Ray Barretto |
3:54 | |||
1.6
|
Quitate La Máscara
Ray Barretto |
4:26 | |||
1.7
|
Se Que Volveras
Ray Barretto |
3:45 | |||
1.8
|
Power
Ray Barretto |
5:59 |
Craft Latino, the Latin division of Craft Recordings, is proud to present a 50th Anniversary vinyl reissue of Barretto Power. The album is released in hi-res 96/24 and 192/24 digital formats for the first time, this album is the first in a string of genre-defining afro-caribbean masterpieces released by Ray Barretto during the first half of the ’70s.
A member of the Fania All-Stars and a prodigious conguero who never allowed his technical chops to overshadow the funky groove of his orchestra, Ray Barretto is one of the key artists in the history of both the Fania label and the New York salsa explosion. Born in New York of Puerto Rican roots, Barretto began his career as a young conga player, performing with some of the best jazzmen of his day, from Charlie Parker and Gene Ammons, to Dizzy Gillespie and Kenny Burrell. Barretto’s accomplishments as a jazz and Latin musician were extensive – per Jazz Profiles from NPR, “Barretto is credited for being the first U.S.-born percussionist to integrate the African-based conga drum into jazz.
This fact has designated him as one of the early ‘crossover’ artists in jazz – skillfully balancing his Latin leanings and his love for bebop throughout a long and successful career.” In the late ’60s however, he launched his career as a visionary bandleader with an intriguing fusion of Latin Soul, boogaloo, traditional Afro-Cuban dance formats and a dash of Latin jazz. Just as the boogaloo movement was losing steam, Barretto found his true calling in the more rugged soundscapes of the emerging salsa movement.
Released in 1970 – a momentous year for tropical music – Barretto Power is the first in a series of iconic LPs that signal the bandleader’s coming of age, as he crystallized the specific sound – nimble, tight and funky – that he remains most closely associated with. There are a couple of socially conscious Latin Soul-flavored numbers in Barretto Power – the lyrics on the infectious “Right On” and closing jam “Power” are as timely today as when they were written 50 years ago – but most of the material here brims with salsa frenzy, boasting a tightly knit band of seasoned musicians like Orestes Vilató on timbales and a young Andy González on bass.
192 kHz / 24-bit, 96 kHz / 24-bit PCM – Fania Studio Masters
Tracks 1-8 – contains high-resolution digital transfers of material originating from an analogue master source
Tracks 1-8 – contains high-resolution digital transfers of material originating from an analogue master source
Track title | Peak (dB FS) | RMS (dB FS) | LUFS (integrated) | DR | |
Album average Range of values | -0.89 -1.89 to -0.20 | -19.47 -21.91 to -17.36 | -16.10 -18.40 to -13.70 | 13 12 to 14 | |
1 | Oye La Noticia | -0.21 | -18.01 | -14.7 | 12 |
2 | Perla Del Sur | -0.67 | -18.80 | -15.4 | 12 |
3 | Right On | -0.42 | -18.05 | -14.5 | 13 |
4 | De Qué Te Quejas Tú | -0.24 | -17.36 | -13.7 | 12 |
5 | Y Dicen | -0.20 | -19.95 | -16.6 | 13 |
6 | Quitate La Máscara | -1.89 | -20.75 | -17.2 | 13 |
7 | Se Que Volveras | -1.63 | -21.91 | -18.3 | 13 |
8 | Power | -1.88 | -20.97 | -18.4 | 14 |