Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review
(10 customer reviews) 13 of 13 people found the following review helpful
Homesick!,
March 9, 2002 Victor Caraballo (Orange County, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Lamento Borincano--Early Puerto Rican Music: 1916-1939 (Audio CD)
I was captivated by this CD set. Cannot put it down. As part of the process of teaching my kids about Puerto Rican culture and history, this music is an invaluable treat. AY Bendito! what memories. Highly recommended for its historical content.
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful
Old, rare recordings from off the beaten track,
January 4, 2003 DJ Joe Sixpack (...in Middle America) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Lamento Borincano--Early Puerto Rican Music: 1916-1939 (Audio CD)
If you want to delve deep down into the primorial history of Puerto Rican acoustic music, this collection is pretty hard to beat. These recordings include some of the oldest examples of the various danzas, plenas and guarachas that immigrant performers brought with them during the interwar exodus to New York City... On the whole, this 2-CD set may be a bit too stark for all but the most dedicated fans, but it's certainly an amazing collection, drawing on dozens of rare 78s by bands such as Canario Y Su Grupo, Los Reyes De La Plena and the Sexteto Flores... Also of note are the rigorously PC liner notes, which see the development of Puerto Rican pop strictly in terms of cultural colonization and commercial cooptation... Politics aside, this is a mighty fine collection, ideal for any serious student of PR musical culture.
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful
Great compiation!!!,
January 8, 2003 Cruz A. Rodriguez (Gainesville, GA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Lamento Borincano--Early Puerto Rican Music: 1916-1939 (Audio CD)
Received this 2-CD set as a Christmas present and I have been enjoying it since. It is a great compilation with a lot of history. There are groups that I have never heard off and interpretations of rythms that are very different from the way they are played now. But it is a very good representation of the music played in New York for the Puerto Ricans inmigrants there. I know very well they enjoyed that music at the time, the very same way we present time inmigrants enjoy the modern salsa and the "jibaro" music. VIVA PUERTO RICO!!!!