The Latin Jazz Show

Bringing you the best of latin jazz and salsa.

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WELCOME / BIENVENIDOS - Here, you will take a musical journey into the world of  "LATIN JAZZ & SALSA"..........MUSICA, MAESTRO, POR FAVOR!
        
                                                                                   
*Listen Live*                                                                                                                                                                        

 Fridays 6pm-10pm 

 wclmradioonline.com  

 On Air Call In: 804-231-7685    

 ( 

     "El Guiro", Frankie Morales, "Sweet Lou"

    Host:  'Sweet Lou' Hidalgo  - The Voice of Latin Jazz

Co-Host:  'El Guiro' Miguelito Lebron 

 

 

 

  

If you're looking for the best in Latin Jazz & Salsa, The Latin Jazz Show is for you.  The Latin Jazz Show fills the Airwaves and Internet with the good stuff, every Friday evening here on WCLM.  You will hear everything from Ray Barretto, Mongo Santamaria, Jimmy Bosch, Machito & His Afro-Cuban All Stars and many, many others that you will not hear on the Richmond or Tri-City airwaves, or for that matter, anywhere else except on The Latin Jazz ShowStart your weekend off right with your Host's  The Voice of Latin Jazz "Sweet Lou" & "El Guiro"  as they spin the hottest tracks and take you on a four hour tour through the history of Latin Music.

 

 

  The Latin Jazz Show is brought to you by: Su Plomero Latino Preferido

 

Master & Sons Plumbing
"2nd Generation of Fine Service"

Shop: (804) 323-0202   Cell: (804) 337-0750
Let the masters do it right...

matereandsonsplumbing@yahoo.com       www.masterandsonsplumbing.com

 

Also by: Su Compania De Hipoteca

 

Guaranteed Home Mortgage Company inc

"Meeting your Financial needs is just the begiining of our specialized service"

Office:804-612-1201  Fax:804-612-1205

donlebron@aol.com        www.ghmc.com

 

Ritmo Caribe Promotions 804-399-8760 ritmocar@aol.com

Disco Movil Fusion 804-901-7086 Discomovilfusion.com


 

Latin jazz is the general term given to music that combines rhythms from African and Latin American countries with jazz and classical harmonies from Latin America, the Caribbean, Europe and United States.  The two main categories of Latin Jazz are Brazilian and Afro-Cuban.

 

One of the contribution of Latins (Latinos in Spanish) to America, Latin jazz was further popularized in the late 1940s. Dizzy Gillespie and Stan Kenton began to combine the rhythm section and structure of Afro-Cuban music, exemplified by Machito and His Afro-Cubans, whose musical director Mario Bauza created the first Latin jazz composition "Tanga" on May 31, 1943, with jazz instruments and solo improvisational ideas. On March 31, 1946, Stan Kenton recorded "Machito," written by his collaborator / arranger Pete Rugolo, which is considered by many to be the first Latin jazz recording by American jazz musicians. The Kenton band was augmented by Ivan Lopez on bongos and Eugenio Reyes on maracas. Later, on December 6th of the same year, Stan Kenton recorded an arrangement of the Afro-Cuban tune The Peanut Vendor with members of Machito's rhythm section. In September of 1947, Dizzy Gillespie collaborated with Machito conga player Chano Pozo to perform the "Afro-Cuban Drums Suite" at Carnegie Hall. This was the first concert to feature an American band playing Afro-Cuban jazz and Pozo remained in Gillespie's Orchestra to produce "Cubana Be, Cubana Bop" among others.

 

In comparison with traditional jazz, Latin jazz employs straight rhythm, rather than swung rhythm. Latin jazz rarely employs a backbeat, using a form of the clave instead. The conga, timbale, güiro, and claves are percussion instruments which often contribute to a Latin sound.

Samba originated from nineteenth century Afro-Brazilian music such as the Lundu. It employs a modified form of the clave. Bossa Nova is a hybrid music based on the samba rhythm, but influenced by European and American music from Debussy to US jazz. Bossa Nova originated in the 1960s, largely from the efforts of Brazilians Antonio Carlos Jobim and João Gilberto, and American Stan Getz. Its most famous song is arguably The Girl from Ipanema sung by Gilberto and his wife, Astrud Gilberto.

 

Latin jazz music, like most types of jazz music, can be played in small or large groups. Small groups, or combos, often use the Be-bop format made popular in the 1950s in America, where the musicians play a standard melody, many of the musicians play an improvised solo, and then everyone plays the melody again. In Latin jazz bands, percussion often takes a center stage during a solo, and a conga or timbale can add a melodic line to any performance. 

 

 



The Team 

 
Host:   The Voice of Latin Jazz "Sweet Lou" Hidalgo
Co-Host:   "El Guiro" Miguel Lebron
Producer:   Jimmy "Sabor" Castro
Eng. Producer:   Orangel "Bam-Bam" Bustamante
Associate Producer:   Willy "Don Pepin de la Salsa" Rodriguez (not in picture)
 
 
 
 
 
 
(seated)  Sweet Lou, The Voice of Latin Jazz
(top row, from left to right) El Guiro, Bam-Bam, & Sabor