If you call yourself a lover of salsa—in all its contradictions, heat, and sorrow—this is your new bible.

The Colombian-French singer reimagines a bolero-salsa hybrid. Recorded in 2025 specifically for this compilation. The strings are lush but not saccharine—think Armando Manzanero meets Willie Colón. A modern classic in embryo.

A respectful but radical rework. The original timba energy is preserved, but the remix adds a dubwise echo and a sampled botella percussion from Havana’s streets. Danceable yet disorienting.

From their 2025 album. Cuban mambo revived with analog precision. The female coro is fierce; the baritone sax solo recalls 1950s Palladium. Yet the production is crisp and modern. Timeless.

A rare 1977 single recorded in Puerto Rico with the band of Tommy Olivencia. Cheo’s phrasing is conversational—he sings to one person in a crowded room. The coro (choir) sounds like a congregation. Spiritual.

★★★★½ (4.5/5) Standout Tracks: Héctor Lavoe’s “El Paraíso de los Solitarios,” La Lupe’s “Fiebre” (live), Grupo Niche’s “Cali Amanece” (live) For fans of: The Rough Guide to Salsa , Fania All-Stars, Calle 54 soundtrack, DJs Lubi Jovanovic and Boddhi Satva. Streaming & purchase links available September 18, 2026 via Sonido del Corazón Records. A portion of proceeds benefits the Puerto Rico Salsa Archive and Cali’s Escuela de Ritmo.

The Cuban funk star experiments with salsa dura. The result is a polyrhythmic feast—guaguancó, funk guitar, and a tres solo. Lyrics mock purists who police genres. A joyful middle finger.

From 1973’s of the same name. Not the radio edit—the full 7:12 version. Barretto’s congas are a second voice. The trombone solo by Barry Rogers is a masterclass in tension. Listen for the moment the cowbell drops out: that’s the vacilón .