MusicConsulting
All Star
Shaft Joe Bataan version 

And respect to you for being real about the culture of music, in general.Respects music for always dropping heat.rep
The concert date fell on a Friday. The Yankees were in Oakland, Calif., playing the A's. In the Bronx, however, the stadium became "the largest gathering place for Puerto Ricans at the time," said Ray Collazo, a Puerto Rican disc jockey from Philadelphia. He made the trip to attend the historic concert.
"There were Puerto Rican flags everywhere. At one point, people passed around a giant Puerto Rican flag in the stands. There was a deep feeling of 'Boricua' pride," said Collazo, who was 20 at the time. Boricua is the term Puerto Rican natives often use to proudly identify themselves.
In 1973, most of the Latin population of New York was Puerto Rican, and the Bronx was the center of that community in the city.
The lineup for the concert was phenomenal. Not only because it gathered the legendary Fania All-Stars but also because the opening acts were three great Latin bands from the era: Tipica 73 with Adalberto Santiago; El Gran Combo with Andy Montañez; and Mongo Santamaria.
When the Fania All-Stars finally took the stage, the audience was "super excited," Collazo said. Many people in the crowd became so excited that they could no longer remain seated.
"We played only one set of songs," Harlow said. "During the song 'Congo Bongo' [which featured a conga duel between Mongo Santamaria and Ray Barretto], the audience went wild and stormed the field."
Said Collazo: "Johnny Pacheco [one of the musicians] started screaming and asking people not to enter the field. But the more he said it, the more people jumped in."
Police were unable to contain the crowd, and the musicians stopped performing when the audience overtook the stage.
"A girl started dancing on top of my piano, and I got scared," Harlow said. "We had placed fireworks inside the piano to set them off later, during the show. I saw that crazy crowd taking the stage, and I told Pacheco, 'Let's get out of here before this thing blows up,'" Harlow recalled with a big laugh.
"I ran with some others towards the trailers behind the stage. We locked ourselves in there," he said. "Some of the other musicians ran towards the dugouts and locked themselves in the clubhouses."
Pretty Much they had the most numbers on this mix.Tito puente
Willie colon
Hector lavoe
I can't rep back it is gone for me stillRespects music for always dropping heat.rep
This cover is A1Willie Colon & Hector: the o.g. gangstas who fought people who tried it with them. Don't be threatening to a man with a Trombone. He's going to break your face with it.
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You see that suit? That guy with the blanket & rope, he didn't make the right decisionThat cover was Pre No Limit, Rap A Lot,Suave House,Ruthless.
More Lavoe.....![]()