Instant Party
Mongo Santamaria
Introducing Concord's Instant Party Series...
Here’s a series of fun and festive artist CD collections that’ll turn any gathering into an Instant Party. Featuring only the finest, hand-picked, 100% real party music—no artificial colors or flavors—each disc in Concord’s Instant Partyseries is packed full of the celebratory sounds of a Grade-A, top-shelf Concord artist. From the spicy Latin sounds of Tito Puente and Mongo Santamaria to the velvety smooth, swinging vocals of Mel Tormé, just spin any disc in this atmosphere-enlivening series and you and have an Instant Party!
TRACKLISTING
- 1. Day Tripper
- 2. Soca Me Nice
- 3. Who's Got The Bread?
- 4. Mother Jones
- 5. Papa Willie
- 6. Quiet Fire
- 7. Tropical Breeze
- 8. La Manzana (The Apple)
- 9. Philadelphia
- 10. Juan Jose
- 11. Ponce
FIND OUT MORE ABOUT MONGO SANTAMARIA
MORE RELEASES FROM MONGO SANTAMARIA
with Dizzy Gillespie, Toots Thielemans, Tommy Villarini, Doug Harris, Allen Hoist, Milton Hamilton, Lee Smith, Steve Berrios
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Get more Mongo for your money with this special 2-CD collection! Featuring the Latin jazz legend’s soulful conga drumming on two timeless… MORE
From funky guajira to charanga to mambo, this collection of Mongo Santamaria performances typifies the legendary conguero-band leader's inimitable… MORE
Even before his recording of “Watermelon Man” turned him into a crossover star in 1963, Mongo Santamaria was a hitmaker in the Latin… MORE
Mongo Santamaria was for for years by far the most accomplished and acknowledged exponent of Afro-Cuban music working in North America. Dating… MORE
with El Fine, Armandito, Julio, Paquito, Niño Rivera, Pepito, Bol, Willie Bobo, Yeyito, Gustavito, Cheo Junco, Armando Raymact, Luis… MORE
Early in 1963, Mongo Santamaria accomplished something that even then was a rarity in the world of American pop music. His band's instrumental… MORE
Mongo Santamaria long ago joined the pantheon of Latin-jazz greats. If he had done nothing else but introduce the world to a young composer named… MORE
In the early 1960s a geographically strange matching of Afro-Cuban music and San Francisco jazz occurred--mostly in the Treat Street headquarters… MORE












