EL NUEVO MONTUNO LLEGÓ by ROBERTO Y SU NUEVO MONTUNO
| SKU | 143333 |
| Artist | ROBERTO Y SU NUEVO MONTUNO |
| Title | EL NUEVO MONTUNO LLEGÓ |
| Label | VAMPISOUL |
| Catalog # | VAMPI 347 |
| Tag | |
| Release | W 09 - 2026 |
| Format | Vinyl - EULP |
| EAN Barcode | 8435008865207 |
| Import | |
| € 29,50 | incl. VAT, excl. shipping |
Tracks
- El nuevo montuno llegó
- Llamé a changó
- Monina y ramón
- Balancéate
- Triste arrabal
- Me queda un guaguancó
- Dichoso
- Oye tu son, borinquen
Description
First officially licensed and remastered vinyl of Roberto Y Su Nuevo Montuno’s 1970 salsa dura classic, featuring detailed liner notes and rare photos that tell the band’s untold story.
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Roberto y su Nuevo Montuno recorded their first album, “El Nuevo Montuno Llegó” (1970), when Roberto Berríos was just 22 years old. This was also the debut release on Haddock’s own Uniart label.
Berríos remembers that they did the recording in two sessions, splitting it up into four tracks per visit. The engineer was the famed Pedro “Pedrito” Henríquez, who recorded El Gran Combo, Roberto Roena and many others. The band had a mix of tasty, powerful originals, from Tony Cintrón’s title track that announced the band had arrived, ‘El Nuevo Montuno Llegó,’ to Quique Dávila’s mournful ‘Triste Arrabal.’ Then there was the hit Santería themed tune, ‘Llamé a Changó,’ which was a song that Quique Dávila brought to the band, but had been originally composed by Carlos Pinto, though Quique was given the credit. Dávila also composed ‘Me Queda Un Guaguancó,’ which is Roberto’s favorite song on the record (as well as a fan favorite), with Papo sounding like his friend Héctor Lavoe, and Quique Dávila’s proud manifesto declaring that Puerto Rico now had its own son montuno, ‘Oye Tu Son, Borinquen,’ featuring the pianist’s tasty but brief solo.
The cover versions came from the group’s earliest period when most of their repertoire consisted of renditions of beloved but lesser known tunes, and include Louie Ramírez’s ‘Balancéate’ (a favorite of Roberto’s from Ray Barretto’s songbook), Bobby Valentín’s ‘Monina y Ramón’ (recorded during his stint with Willie Rosario), and a bolero indelibly sung by Cheo Feliciano when he was with the Joe Cuba Sextet, ‘Dichoso,’ written by Joe Cuba’s talented pianist, Nick Jiménez. Some of the arranging was done by Cintrón and some by Dávila, though Quique had some help from his old friend from El Combo Moderno, Freddie Miranda, who at that time was with Roberto Roena’s Apollo Sound. Roberto says that the arrangements of the cover tunes were made specifically to be different and more contemporary sounding than the originals.













