Alegre Records

Alegre Records was a New York City record label that was founded in 1956 [1] by Al Santiago who owned a 1950s record store in The Bronx named Casalegre and co-founded by clothing businessman Ben Perlman.[2] It specialized in Latin music and was significant for featuring artists such as Johnny Pacheco and Tito Puente and was the first to record a series of great Latin artists, from Johnny Pacheco, Eddie Palmieri, through Willie Colón. It has been called the "Blue Note" of Latin music.

In 1960, Johnny Pacheco's first orchestra had signed with Alegre Records and their first album titled “Johnny Pacheco y Su Charanga” sold over 100,000 copies within the first year and was the biggest selling album in Latin music history up to that point.

In 1961, Al Santiago created the Alegre All Stars (also spelled Alegre All-Stars), remembering the well-known Cuban Jam Sessions ("Descargas Cubanas") in the 1950s on the Panart Records label. Johnny Pacheco got his friend, the trombonist Barry Rogers, to play with the Alegre All-Stars which featured a unique instrumentation of flute, tenor sax, and trombone.Fred Weinberg was Santiago's and the labels favorite sound engineer who also recorded many of the artists individually.

In 1975 Alegre Records was sold to Fania Records.

See also

References

  1. Cf. Child
  2. Cf. Boggs 1992
  • The House That Al Built: The Alegre Records Story 1957-1977, 2-CD Set CD (Fania / Emusica - Remastered Edition 130 315), Released 2008
  • Boggs, Vernon W., "Salsiology: Afro-Cuban music and the evolution of salsa in New York City", New York : Greenwood Press, 1992. ISBN 0-313-28468-7
  • Child, John, "Profile of Al Santiago", The Descarga Review, February 23, 1999

Further reading

  • Rondón, César Miguel, The Book of Salsa: A Chronicle of Urban Music from the Caribbean to New York City, translated by Frances R. Aparicio with Jackie White, University of North Carolina Press, 2008. ISBN 978-0-8078-5859-2. Cf. Index.
  • Washburne, Christopher, Sounding Salsa: performing Latin music in New York City, Temple University Press, June 28, 2008. ISBN 978-1-59213-315-4. Cf. pp.17, 19.
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