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CD - Remastered
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Now, that’s more like it. Less than a year prior to this double-disc release, Sony International put out a single-CD comp of vintage Tito Puente, dubbed Lo Esencial in Spanish, which means “The Essential” in English. It was less than that, in either language -- missing, for example, “Oye Como Va.” Partly, Puente’s vast catalog is to blame; even two six-disc box sets, released after the mambo king’s death, failed to crystallize the import of his five-decade career. The Essential, at least, is no insult. Two discs of 40 tracks capture his most significant mambo-era material, clocking out around 1961’s Dance Mania, Vol. 2. (For the rest of the story, including T.P.’s reign with the vocalists La Lupe and Celia Cruz, tune in to The Rough Guide to Tito Puente.) In fact, the tracks seem to have been remastered from the box set -- the bass is punchy and Puente’s intricate arrangements are excitingly audible. Salsa fans can be shockingly ignorant of the big-band sound that birthed today’s pop-oriented style. The Essential provides a potent introduction to the mambo maestro. Mark Schwartz, Barnes & Noble