(The Chi Chi) Cha Cha Cha - Xavier Cugat, Morgan, K.
Yo Ta Namora - Xavier Cugat, Rodriguez, A.
The Anything Can Happen Mambo - Xavier Cugat, Sherman, Richard [1
Mambo Gordo - Xavier Cugat, López, G.
Bésame Mucho - Xavier Cugat, Velazquez, Consuelo
Tumbao - Xavier Cugat, Bauza, M.
Bread, Love, and Cha Cha Cha - Xavier Cugat, Cugat, Xavier
La Mucura - Xavier Cugat, Fuentes, A.
Cuban Mambo - Xavier Cugat, Angulo, R.
Mondoguero - Xavier Cugat, Ayala, T.
Mondongo - Xavier Cugat, Hernández, R.
Who Me? - Xavier Cugat, Cameron, M.
One of Latin music's original 20th-century superstars of stage, record, and screen, the bandleader born Francisco de Asis Javier Cugat Mingall de Cru y Deulofeo may have delivered the rumba, tango, and mambo with a sli... more »ck mainstream veneer, but it was precisely those shrewd commercial instincts that undoubtedly brought a rich, rhythm-charged world of music to audiences who might never otherwise have been exposed to it. The 23 gloriously remastered tracks here span the '40s and '50s, an era when "Cugie" was a household name due to his myriad radio and film appearances. The material ranges from an energetic 1941 Miguelito Valdes performance of the Afro-Cuban staple (and later Desi Arnaz signature tune) "Babalu" and a Cugie-ized take on Tito Puente's evergreen "Suavecito" to more jazz-kitschy renditions of "The Brand New Cha-Cha" and "The Anything Can Happen Mambo" by third wife Abbe Lane (Cugat would later marry pop culture icon Charro). The mambo and merengue fads of the '40s and '50s are also given their due via Pérez Prado's "Mambo Jambo" and "A Bailar Merengue" respectively. Machito may have been more "authentic," but few could quibble with the effervescence and missionary zeal Cugat brought to Latin music for eight remarkable decades. Let this be your appetizer. --Jerry McCulley« less
One of Latin music's original 20th-century superstars of stage, record, and screen, the bandleader born Francisco de Asis Javier Cugat Mingall de Cru y Deulofeo may have delivered the rumba, tango, and mambo with a slick mainstream veneer, but it was precisely those shrewd commercial instincts that undoubtedly brought a rich, rhythm-charged world of music to audiences who might never otherwise have been exposed to it. The 23 gloriously remastered tracks here span the '40s and '50s, an era when "Cugie" was a household name due to his myriad radio and film appearances. The material ranges from an energetic 1941 Miguelito Valdes performance of the Afro-Cuban staple (and later Desi Arnaz signature tune) "Babalu" and a Cugie-ized take on Tito Puente's evergreen "Suavecito" to more jazz-kitschy renditions of "The Brand New Cha-Cha" and "The Anything Can Happen Mambo" by third wife Abbe Lane (Cugat would later marry pop culture icon Charro). The mambo and merengue fads of the '40s and '50s are also given their due via Pérez Prado's "Mambo Jambo" and "A Bailar Merengue" respectively. Machito may have been more "authentic," but few could quibble with the effervescence and missionary zeal Cugat brought to Latin music for eight remarkable decades. Let this be your appetizer. --Jerry McCulley
Joe Sixpack -- Slipcue.com | ...in Middle America | 03/03/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Bandleader Xavier Cugat is frequently looked down on by some Latin music purists, but I guess that's their loss. This is a fab collection with a generous cross-section of Cugat's work on the Columbia label, from 1941-57, featuring swinging hits like "Babalu" and "Bim Bam Bum," and tons of talent including singers such as Tito Rodriguez, Miguelito Valdes and Abbe Lane (fresh from her work with Tito Puente) as well as Cugat's top-flight band, which never quite gets the credit it deserves. Yeah, sure, this stuff is kitschy and contrived, but these guys also really rocked(!) There's some seriously hot percussion going on in the background, and even the songs, taken on their own cornball terms, are a lot of fun. This is probably one of the best-programmed Cugat collections you're ever likely to come across. Check it out!"
I am biased... after all Pepito Arvelo was my uncle
Cojonu | Dallas, TX | 11/22/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This album has great timeless music. Before the latin craze of Ricky Martin, Shakira and Enrique Iglesias, these guys were setting the stage for La Vida Loca..."