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Bio Ritmo: NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert

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Latino migration in the U.S. has placed people of Afro-Caribbean heritage all over the country. Bio Ritmo's heritage leads directly back to that migration — and to the sound of Fania Records, which fueled Latin dance music's transition from the big-band mambos of the 1950s to the cutting-edge sounds of 1970s New York.
Bio Ritmo moves salsa music even further through stellar musicianship: crisp horn charts; a powerful rhythm section of timbales, congas and bongos; and a piano/bass combo that reminds me of the best groove masters in salsa and Latin jazz.
The secret to playing salsa well is a perfect combination of chops and passion that makes listeners move their hips instinctively while looking for enough clear space to break out their favorite salsa moves. This is dance music, and Bio Ritmo has burnished its reputation on dance floors. It's a time-honored tradition: If you can't make the dancers move, then you're in the wrong genre.
So move some furniture around, press play on this video, and enjoy. -- FELIX CONTRERAS
Set List:
"La Vía"
"Picaresca"
"Perdido"
Credits:
Producers: Felix Contreras, Denise DeBelius; Editor: Maggie Starbard; Audio Engineer: Suraya Mohamed; Videographers: Colin Marshall, Denise DeBelius, Maggie Starbard; Production Assistant: Susan Hale Thomas; Photo by Colin Marshall/NPR
Category
Jazz
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