Salsa Suprema-En la conquista del mundo latino
€22,00
In stock
Description
EL Palmas Music rescues a hidden gem of Venezuelan salsa. With the vinyl reissue of In the Conquest of the Latin World (1979), by the Salsa Supreme Orchestra, he pays a fair tribute to Larry Francia. “Larry Francia’s work deserves nothing less than transcendence,” says Miguel Álvarez, the Venezuelan musical collector and archaeologist who one day came across this salsa legend from his country without planning it and knew it was fair and necessary spread his magnificent work. Born in Barlovento, an Afro area of Venezuela where the drum rules, Larry Francia grew up in San Agustín del Sur, a Caracas neighborhood that is salsa territory par excellence. When he was barely 12 years old, Víctor Piñero, one of the most popular orchestra singers in Venezuela in the 60s, summoned him to record choirs. An early initiation that marked Larry forever and at the same time revealed his indisputable talent. “His driving force is singing. “If you’re talking to him, he often stops talking to sing,” says Álvarez. He was a man who never stopped being a musician, even though his living conditions were never the best. And the legacy of Salsa Suprema is key to Venezuelan popular music.” When that orchestra stopped working (there were no producers who supported their tours, their records were pirated in Spain in the 80s), Larry suffered an emotional breakdown and even gave up devoting himself to music for a few years. He was someone who undoubtedly lived for and through music. Larry Francia left this world in 2023, but we are left with a fabulous album like In the Conquest of the Latin World, recovered from the chest of memories by Álvarez and the Suicide Diggerz collective, specialists in rescuing hidden gems. “It is a collector’s item of the most exquisite and least known Venezuelan salsa,” he defines.