Guarapo-Forty_Bangers_From_Barranquilla-(HJR1275)-WEB-2017-USR

Tracklist (M3U)
# Filename Artist Songname Bitrate BPM
1 01-guarapo-kole_con_el_wee.mp3 Guarapo! Kole Con El Wee 320 Unknown
2 02-guarapo-isleno.mp3 Guarapo! Isleño 320 Unknown
3 03-guarapo-el_bobo.mp3 Guarapo! El Bobo 320 Unknown
4 04-guarapo-la_gyal.mp3 Guarapo! La Gyal 320 Unknown
5 05-guarapo-anda.mp3 Guarapo! Anda 320 Unknown
6 06-guarapo-el_sason.mp3 Guarapo! El Sason 320 Unknown
7 07-guarapo-carlitos.mp3 Guarapo! Carlitos 320 Unknown
8 08-guarapo-el_feo.mp3 Guarapo! El Feo 320 Unknown
9 09-guarapo-agua.mp3 Guarapo! Agua 320 Unknown
10 10-guarapo-la_nina.mp3 Guarapo! La Niña 320 Unknown
11 11-guarapo-ah.mp3 Guarapo! AH! 320 Unknown
12 12-guarapo-curacao.mp3 Guarapo! Curaçao 320 Unknown
13 13-guarapo-el_adios.mp3 Guarapo! El Adios 320 Unknown
14 14-guarapo-el_bety.mp3 Guarapo! El Bety 320 Unknown
15 15-guarapo-te_llego_mon.mp3 Guarapo! Te Llego Mon?# 320 Unknown
16 16-guarapo-marisol.mp3 Guarapo! Marisol 320 Unknown
17 17-guarapo-el_nato.mp3 Guarapo! El Nato 320 Unknown
18 18-guarapo-el_gato.mp3 Guarapo! El Gato 320 Unknown
19 19-guarapo-el_papy.mp3 Guarapo! El Papy 320 Unknown
20 20-guarapo-psicodelico.mp3 Guarapo! Psicodelico 320 Unknown
21 21-guarapo-turbiando.mp3 Guarapo! Turbiando 320 Unknown
22 22-guarapo-vasile_2016.mp3 Guarapo! Vasile 2016 320 Unknown
23 23-guarapo-en_seco.mp3 Guarapo! En Seco 320 Unknown
24 24-guarapo-sacale_dios.mp3 Guarapo! Sacale Dios 320 Unknown
25 25-guarapo-el_pitillo_(harold_edit).mp3 Guarapo! El Pitillo (Harold Edit) 320 Unknown
26 26-guarapo-una_noche.mp3 Guarapo! Una Noche 320 Unknown
27 27-guarapo-el_italiano.mp3 Guarapo! El Italiano 320 Unknown
28 28-guarapo-el_reloj.mp3 Guarapo! El Reloj 320 Unknown
29 29-guarapo-y_como.mp3 Guarapo! Y Como? 320 Unknown
30 30-guarapo-el_loco.mp3 Guarapo! El Loco 320 Unknown
31 31-guarapo-el_deito.mp3 Guarapo! El Deito 320 Unknown
32 32-guarapo-el_pase.mp3 Guarapo! El Pase 320 Unknown
33 33-guarapo-quidao.mp3 Guarapo! Quidao 320 Unknown
34 34-guarapo-apretaito.mp3 Guarapo! Apretaito 320 Unknown
35 35-guarapo-voz.mp3 Guarapo! Voz 320 Unknown
36 36-guarapo-tu_fuiste.mp3 Guarapo! Tu Fuiste 320 Unknown
37 37-guarapo-pa_caite.mp3 Guarapo! Pa Caite 320 Unknown
38 38-guarapo-la_pantera.mp3 Guarapo! La Pantera 320 Unknown
39 39-guarapo-mamon.mp3 Guarapo! Mamon 320 Unknown
40 40-guarapo-doble_diablo.mp3 Guarapo! Doble Diablo 320 Unknown
NFO
ARTIST...: Guarapo! TITLE....: Forty Bangers From Barranquilla YEAR.....: 2017 LABEL....: Honest Jon's Records CAT.NO...: HJR1275 GENRE....: Latin TIME.....: 42:32 SIZE.....: 98.07 MB QUALITY..: 320kbps/44.1kHz/Joint Stereo ENCODER..: LAME SOURCE...: WEB RLS.DATE.: 2018/03/07 WEBSITE..: https://play.google.com TRACKLIST 01) (01:05) Kole Con El Wee 02) (01:10) Isle±o 03) (01:21) El Bobo 04) (00:54) La Gyal 05) (01:20) Anda 06) (01:04) El Sason 07) (00:43) Carlitos 08) (01:02) El Feo 09) (01:01) Agua 10) (01:13) La Ni±a 11) (01:09) AH! 12) (01:02) Curaτao 13) (01:01) El Adios 14) (00:56) El Bety 15) (01:01) Te Llego Mon?# 16) (01:10) Marisol 17) (01:06) El Nato 18) (00:59) El Gato 19) (01:00) El Papy 20) (00:40) Psicodelico 21) (00:59) Turbiando 22) (00:49) Vasile 2016 23) (01:06) En Seco 24) (01:10) Sacale Dios 25) (00:58) El Pitillo (Harold Edit) 26) (01:03) Una Noche 27) (00:55) El Italiano 28) (01:13) El Reloj 29) (01:13) Y Como? 30) (01:14) El Loco 31) (01:04) El Deito 32) (00:56) El Pase 33) (01:11) Quidao 34) (01:15) Apretaito 35) (00:57) Voz 36) (01:02) Tu Fuiste 37) (01:03) Pa Caite 38) (01:08) La Pantera 39) (01:15) Mamon 40) (01:04) Doble Diablo Sound system culture in the Colombian cities of Barranquilla and Cartagena stretches back to the 1950s. It began on a small scale, with the sounds being little more than the basic equipment that neighbourhood backyard dance parties needed to play the popular music of the day. The favoured styles were chiefly drawn from the musica coste±a û the popular dance music of the ColombiaÆs Caribbean coast, such as cumbia and porro û and the ubiquitous sounds of Cuban mambo, rumba and son, whose influence had been powerfully felt across the Caribbean basin. During the 1960s, the sound systems or pic≤s û the derivation of the word is obscure, but is thought to come from æpick-upÆ, perhaps a reference to the turntable needle û became more elaborate and more widely established. Employed to build the sounds from scratch, often from reconditioned and recycled gear, local technicians began to ramp up the volume and power. The taste of the selectors also began to include music from further afield, in particular New York salsa, which enterprising sailors had started to bring in to the coast from the US and sell directly to the pic≤s, whose operators were eager for exclusives and fresh sounds. By the end of the decade, the main particulars of the cultura pic≤tera were in place, and popular pic≤s would travel to play dances, known as verbenas, around Cartegena, Barranquilla, and nearby towns and cities. Popular African music was not distributed in Colombia during the post-war period, for the simple reason that there were no immigrant African communities to demand it, and no audience or market for it among Colombians. But as the fashion for salsa began to wane in the early 1970s, the pic≤ operators began to look for a new style. As with many such organic popular developments, there is little concrete information on how the first African records began to appear within the pic≤terosÆ selections û but the consensus seems to be that, as with salsa, they had been first brought in by sailors. The astute pic≤ operators quickly recognised both the potential popularity of the sound, and saw a new way to sonically distinguish their pic≤ from the competition. It is probable that there had been some African music brought in the late 1960s, and also some importation of Haitian records, but one thing is for certain û by the mid- 1970s, a pic≤Æs reputation stood or fell on the selection of African music it could bring to the dance. In response to this highly specialised demand, the importation of African music became systematic, though it remained underground and there was still no general distribution of African recordings. Obtaining the latest and most exclusive African discs had become a matter of huge competition between pic≤s in Cartagena and Barranquilla, and the importers, who typically sold records direct to the pic≤s, could command high sums for their latest discoveries. Pic≤ operators went to great lengths to keep their discoveries and rare cuts exclusive, covering up names, painting over labels and swapping album covers in order to shroud their battle weapons in secrecy. The bigger systems even had buyers outside the country, known as corresponsales, to obtain exclusive and unknown cuts, and the pic≤s jealously guarded their sources. A fair amount of non-Spanish Caribbean music was also mixed in with the African music, and this new dominant sound in the verbenas bore the generic name m·sica africana, with favoured genres including highlife, juju, soukous, mbaqanga, and benga. No culture is static. And whilst turbos and pic≤s still play classic m·sica africana with pride, the new sound of southern Barranquilla is a combination of militant breaks and austere loops known as guarapo (after a popular Colombian drink made of sugarcane and lime). As with the drum breaks favoured by hip-hop DJs, selectors on the pic≤s often play only certain sections of a favoured record. But guarapo producers go further, looping small sections of vocal or guitar and overlaying thumping percussive beats. Each cut is short, little more than a stark and hypnotic drop for the right moment, to be liberally sprayed with a hail of placas. Samples are typically lifted from African music û highlife, soukous and benga tracks are the usual sources. Our own forty commissions raid Nigerian recordings from the 1960s û kicking off by turns with Sagbeni Aragbada, Olalekan Olorode, Steven Amechi, Eagle MinisterÆs Dance Band and Cardinal Rex Jim Lawson. The cuts are rough-hewn and usually intended for just one nightÆs use û one-away distillations of BarranquillaÆs sonic taste as the youth evolve their own iteration of cultura pic≤tera. Most pic≤s still play a mixture of music, and include guarapo cuts alongside the latest tastes in m·sica africana, champeta and so on. Jeanpi Perreo is with the El Rey Latino sound, which combines guarapo with benga and techno. Edwin Producciones is resident producer for the Caribe±o pic≤, one of the best known sound systems in Barranquilla today, and the first to play only guarapo in their verbenas. DJ Ander plays with El Africano, a popular pic≤ based in the Nueva Colombia barrio. As they say in the verbenas, Aqui Suena: the sound is here! -

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