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Track Listing: 1.
Despacito 2. Sube y Baja 3. Parche Mal Pegado 4. Otra Vez Cai 5. Se Tambalea
6. Raro Amor 7. Tu Tambien 8. No Me Implores 9. Si No Fuera Por La Mala Suerte
10. Vete Que Esperas
1.Sonando Despierto
2.Ni Modo
3.Dame Tu Corazon
4.Prisionero De Amor
5.Ojala
6.Sigueme Queriendo
7.Caen Poque Caen
8.Nunca Llega Un Mal
9.Una Por Una
10.Oiga Papa
11.Midnight Lover
12.Amor Y Fuego
$ 11.99
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Con Un Cachito 2. Valiente 3. No Te Vayas 4. Tu Recuerdo Y Yo 5. En
Aquel Baile 6. Chica Chica 7. Ya No 8. Teresa La Terible 9. Penas 10.
Por Eso Digo 11. Grover's Magic 12. Eres Tu 13. Joe's Blue Plate Special
14. Overjoyed 15. Naima |
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Latest Release
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Then & Now
In addition to being one
of Tejano's greatest saxophone players, Joe Posada is the most
skillful composer to fuse jazz and Tejano in the '90s. Citing John
Coltrane, Jeff Lorber and Alfonso Ramos as influences, his ability to
integrate jazz chord progressions and scatting into the polka beat has
brought Tejano one step closer to the multi-genre fusion claimed, but
not always achieved, by the genre's boosters.
Posada was born in San Antonio in 1954, the same year orchestra leader
Isidro Lopez integrated accordions into his ensemble in Alice, Texas,
an historic event in the birth of what is now called Tejano music.
Raised in the predominantly Hispanic West Side, he began playing the
sax at age 12. His parents weren't musicians, but his mother forced
him to study music to keep him away from friends she disapproved of.
He worked his way up through talent shows, neighborhood groups and the
like, finally getting stints with well-known local groups Rudy Tee and
the Reno-Bops and Zapata. In 1973, during what author Ramiro Burr
calls Tejano's Golden Age, he graduated to the Royal Jesters, a
premier Onda Chicana act of the day. He helped out with musical
arrangements in addition to playing sax.
Posada joined ex-Jester
David Marez in his band People in 1977, doing occasional lead vocals,
leading rehearsals and collecting money after gigs. Feeling he had the
maturity to set out on his own, he left the group in 1979. He formed
his own band, Quinto Sol, in 1982, naming it for the fifth sun in the
Aztec calendar. He and Quinto Sol signed with Cara Records in 1982 and
recorded five albums for the label during the '80s, often cutting
brassy rancheras written by Johnny Perez or Joe Revelez. He punctuated
his songs with sax solos ranging from cool to fiery depending on the
situation, and applied his powerful, if not always subtle, baritone to
romantic lyrics. His music remained on the progressive side of Tejano,
preferring wind instruments to accordion.
Posada had begun composing
in the mid-'70s, but he guarded his songs, unwilling to give control
of publishing to Cara president Bob Grever. But on January 1, 1990,
Capitol/EMI purchased Cara, and the new executives let him control his
own publishing. Posada didn't record his songs immediately, relying on
tunes by Humberto Ramon and Revelez for his 1991 CD Playin' It with
Style, which featured the ranchera "Valiente"
("Valiant"), a big hit with a sing-along chorus that
foreshadowed Tejano/jazz fusion efforts to come. He truly came into
his own as a composer on 1993's Breakaway, for which he wrote all the
songs. He went the extra mile for his listeners, recording a salsa
track, a sax instrumental, and the jazz-soul title track. But it was
his 1994 release Canción para Mi Padre (Song for My Father) that
found him integrating jazz and polka seamlessly, putting him
light-years ahead of the formulaic cookie-cutter bands. The 1996
release J Posada is a bit misleading — only his son, Gen-Xer Joe
Jr., is pictured on the cover, but the elder Posada sings lead on
eight of the ten tracks.
The late '90s found Joe Sr.
pursuing a music degree in San Antonio and doing an increasing number
of jazz gigs on his own and with Small World and Los Jazz Vatos.
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Joe Posada
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For More Information Contact:
Chizzme.com @
Tel:630.742.8714
P.O. Box 1522 Aurora, IL 60507
Internet:
escareno@avenew.com
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