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The template for Latin jazz. In 1939, Mario Bauza, Dizzy Gillespie's section mate in Cab Calloway's trumpet section, introduced an eager Gillespie to Cuban rhythms. Eight years later, with his monumental bebop innovations with Charlie Parker behind him, Gillespie was ready to pump Latin rhythms into his own big band. Bauza suggested Chano Pozo, a virtuoso conguero newly arrived from Cuba. The flashy Pozo would be killed in mysterious circumstances within a year, but his influence on Gillespie, and the future of Afro-Cuban music, was permanent. The music they created -- with such arrangers as Gil Fuller and George Russell -- is the cornerstone of Latin jazz and, 50 years later, still its highest achievement. "Manteca," "Cubana Be," "Cubana Bop," "Algo Bueno," and "Guarachi Guaro" (recorded after Chano's murder) are all immortal recordings, still capable of tingling the spine. This two-CD set also includes some of Gillespie's electrifying breakthrough sides of the early and mid '40s; listen for the Latin influence blooming, particularly on the landmark," A Night in Tunisia." Lee Jeske, Barnes & Noble