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For all the attendant hoopla and cashing-in surrounding the death of Celia Cruz, the fact remains that there still is no good single-disc collection of the material that made her a star. The work that earned her the title La Reina de la Salsa -- the Queen of Salsa -- still wafts through the legal miasma surrounding the rest of the Fania catalog. Fortunately, Europeans (or their copyright laws) have had better luck licensing this stuff, and with The Rough Guide to Celia Cruz arrives a solid 72-minute defense of the crown. These songs, culled from efforts with the orchestras of Johnny Pacheco, Ray Barretto, and Tito Puente, gave Celia her second and most enduring shot at stardom in the '70s, not the overproduced, game, but misguided tracks that populate the latter-day Celia hits packages. Which is not to say this set's doctrinaire. The Rough Guides always throw in a few curve balls; here it's the boogaloos "Metida Con You" and "Sugar Sugar" (a Spanish version of the Archies hit). As fun as they are, they don't match the firepower of a classic like "Qimbara" or "Toro Mata" -- frustratingly absent here. But to hear Cruz tap the Afro-Cuban roots of a song like "Bambarakatunga" is to understand her gifts for speed, precision, and soul. Of course, Celia had a career prior to all of this with La Sonora Matancera. Pair this superlative disc with Rhino's 100% Azúcar: The Best of Celia Cruz with La Sonora Matancera and one of the myriad comps featuring "Quimbara" and "Toro Mata," and you have a musical portrait of the Queen that does her legacy proud. Mark Schwartz, Barnes & Noble