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Havana 3 a.m.

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Download links and information about Havana 3 a.m. by Pérez Prado / Perez Prado. This album was released in 1956 and it belongs to Salsa, Latin genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 40:51 minutes.

Artist: Pérez Prado / Perez Prado
Release date: 1956
Genre: Salsa, Latin
Tracks: 12
Duration: 40:51
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. La Comparsa (featuring Perez Prado And His Orchestra) 2:52
2. Desconfianza (Distrust) (featuring Perez Prado And His Orchestra) 3:13
3. La Faraona (featuring Perez Prado And His Orchestra) 2:55
4. Bésame Mucho (featuring Perez Prado And His Orchestra) 3:10
5. The Freeway Mambo (featuring Perez Prado And His Orchestra) 2:22
6. Granada (featuring Perez Prado And His Orchestra) 4:30
7. Almendra (Almond) (featuring Perez Prado And His Orchestra) 2:48
8. Bacoa (featuring Perez Prado And His Orchestra) 2:05
9. Peanut Vendor (El Manicero) (featuring Perez Prado And His Orchestra) 2:59
10. Baia (featuring Perez Prado And His Orchestra) 3:11
11. Historia de un Amor (The Story of Love) (featuring Perez Prado And His Orchestra) 2:48
12. Mosaico Cubaño (Cuban Sketch) (featuring Perez Prado And His Orchestra) 7:58

Details

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Following the successes of his previous albums, mostly reissues of proven hits in Mexico, Pérez Prado was entitled to do his own progressive thing at least for one album. Havana, 3 A.M. sneaked past the dance-music censors at RCA and kicked down the doors for acceptance of authentic Latin music in the U.S. Immediately into the first track, "La Comparsa," we hear the full flowering of the Prado sound: searing, blaring trumpet over heavy rhythm in very spare arrangements. "The Freeway Mambo" is definitive, one of Prado's unsung best. That the music is also suitable for dancing seems irrelevant. This is the sound of the dancer on the jacket, of pre-Castro Cuba at night, of Spanish-influenced cities and African-influenced hill country. It is louder than bullfight music (even the ballads), absolutely direct and brash, yet so deftly and compellingly arranged that it never tires. A timeless classic, Havana, 3 A.M. is worth obtaining in both its original form and a simulated-stereo reissue.