The CD:
Tracks: 1. Fantasia; 2. Tumba la Caña Jibarito; 3. Los Golpes Enseñan; 4. Diferente; 5. Libre Soy; 6. Se Casa la Rumba; 7. De Cualquier Manera; 8. La Quarter Llego
Musicians:
Luis Poblete (congas, v); Sergio Botero (v); Cristian Saavedra (bb); Sebastian Orellana (bongo, campana); Lazaro Numa (, tb, v); Leo Salvo (guiro, v); Ben Gillespie, Jimmy Bowman (tb); Andrew James
Notes of Quarter Street:
From the first few notes, it sounds like the real thing. Piano and bass riff hard. Percussion
enters. ¡Oiga Papa! Listen up! The trombones come in thick and strong. Fantasia, the first
song on Quarter Street’s self-titled LP is authentic ‘salsa dura’ from the old school. Hard
salsa. It’s not shiny, it’s not clean and poppy or unduly jazzy. It’s tough, it’s gritty and
ballsy, and in terms of musicianship, writing and production, it straight up cooks.
Sergio Botero’s voice is pure street Salsero, a worthy inheritor of the tradition defined by
Hector Lavoe and Rubén Blades. Conguero Luis Poblete, and brothers Cesar and Cristian
Saavedra on baby bass and timbales round out the core group of Quarter Street. Like
many Latinoamerican migrants to Australia, their parents fled the various coups and
revolutions of the 70s and 80s, raising their children to the sounds of the Spanish
language superstars of the era. Cuban brass virtuoso Lazaro Numa, recently arrived in
Melbourne, adds a taste of Havana to the underlying mix of classic Puerto Rico / New
York styles. The boys grew up salsa and now they’ve brought together an impressive unit
of Melbourne’s finest Latin and Jazz musicians together to light up turntables and
dancefloors worldwide.
There’s been a lot of rough and real analog funk, soul and Afro vinyl material released in
the last couple of decades, from the Dap-Kings and Antibalas in New York to the Poets
of Rhythm in Germany. So far, few have flown the flag for the revival of hard-out analog
era Latin music. Quarter Street are doing it. Salsa dura was born on the mean streets of
New York in the 1970s, now it’s back. Quarter street take their cues from the giants:
Eddie Palmieri, Ray Barreto and Willie Colon and the seminal record labels Fania and
Tico records and charge straight ahead at the 21st century. The time is right.
We invite you to enjoy this new salsa from Australia:
¡¡Viva The Latin Jazz!!
www.quarterstreet.com luis@labjacd.com
www.hopestreetrecordings.com teliah@hopestreetrecordings.com
jazzcaribe@hotmail.com
jazzcaribe@hotmail.com
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