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Antonio Maciel - Sones Mexicanos FLAC album

Tracklist

A1 La Negra
A2 La Malagueña
A3 El Siquisiri
A4 Pena Huasteca
A5 El Maracumbe
A6 Les Vengo A Cantar Aquí
B1 Las Olas
B2 Lucerito
B3 El Cascabel
B4 El Pañuelo
B5 El Gusto
B6 El Pajaro Cu

Notes

For the first time ever on records, two authentic Mexican mariachi bands are presented together, playing simultaneously, in SONES MEXICANS.

Antonio Maciel is a young and virile singer from the state of Michoacán who in recent months has created a gran sensación in Mexico as a result of his records for the Mexican Musart label. He sings, plays cornet, guitar, violin, bass and harp, and is learning to master the JARANA, a folk instrument virtually unknown outside of Mexico.

Conducting the two bands behind the passionate Maciel's singing is Rafael Carrión, of Cananea, Sonora, who is even better known for his motion picture scores.

The result of this unique four-way partnership is an immensely entertaining, extremely musical long-playing record, a session that inspires memories - moods - of the colorful, fresh, rural provinces of Mexico. Maciel sings HUAPANGOS, SON HUASTECOS, and SON JAROCHOS with equal dexterity and enthususiasm.

Thus, SONES MEXICANS is an album quite unlike others. It is not the music of the Continental Hilton or the Bamer cocktail lounge. It is, however, the music that several million Mexicans respond to and love. It deserves a far larger audience.


Antonio Maciel - Sones Mexicanos FLAC album

Musician performer: Antonio Maciel

Title: Sones Mexicanos

Style: Mariachi

Genre: Latin

Size FLAC: 1399 mb

Rating: 4.4 / 5

Votes: 646

Other Formats: MMF WMA AAC VQF RA ASF DTS

Related to Antonio Maciel - Sones Mexicanos FLAC Albums

Shem
When I was a 5 year old, my father bought this album, and 50 years later it still moves me, sometime to tears. For any historian of Mexican music, this is a MUST LP to own. Not one dud track and my only complaint about it, why wasn't it mixed in stereo
Shem
When I was a 5 year old, my father bought this album, and 50 years later it still moves me, sometime to tears. For any historian of Mexican music, this is a MUST LP to own. Not one dud track and my only complaint about it, why wasn't it mixed in stereo