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The Mavericks' experiments in tropical rhythms flower beautifully on singer Raul Malo's solo debut, Today. Malo digs deep into his Cuban-American heritage for inspiration, coupling the past and the present to create an album that is accessible, daring, and always full of life. Malo sings four songs in Spanish, but it's not necessary to know the language to understand the go-for-it energy fueling the texts. Even most of the English-language songs are steeped in Latinalia: big, brassy horn and reed passages; pulsating percussion; wild, flailing guitars; and rambunctious piano glissandos. Desi Arnaz made great records with this formula in the late '40s and early '50s, and Malo, who has the huge advantage of that big, booming, soulful, Orbison-like voice, is a worthy candidate to develop a commercially successfully fusion of Latin and pop that does justice to both styles without watering down either -- although purists will inevitably disagree. "Today," "I See You," "Every Little Thing," and "Ya Tu Veras," the first four songs, set the pace, the first and fourth being strictly high-octane, hard-charging, sacroiliac-endangering dance-floor challenges, the second and third being, respectively, dreamy and desperate romantic interludes. This is songwriting of the highest caliber, every element in its proper place to allow Malo free rein to extend himself emotionally. A duet with Shelby Lynne on the vibrant, jazzy "It Takes Two to Tango" is one of the sexiest duets laid down in years, Lynne's smoky sensuality being the perfect foil for Malo's comedic macho posturing. Fans of Malo's full-voiced balladry are not left adrift here: "Let's Say Goodbye," a piano-vocal track supported by lush strings, will get the tears flowing with its wrenching plea for a second chance at love. Today's got it all, and then some. Raul Malo is a juggernaut. David McGee, Barnes & Noble