• 1.1. annie's mambo
  • 1.2. cozy's mambo
  • 1.3. mambo blues
  • 1.4. the crazy mambo
  • 1.5. early morning mambo
  • 1.6. hamp's mambo
  • 1.7. i just wanna mambo
  • 1.8. night train mambo
  • 1.9. night train mambo
  • 1.10. mambo train
  • 1.11. perdido mambo
  • 1.12. showboat mambo
  • 1.13. peter gunn mambo
  • 1.14. robin's mambo
  • 1.15. we want to see santa mambo
  • 1.16. mambo blues
  • 1.17. guitar mambo
  • 1.18. mambo baby
  • 1.19. mambo indio
  • 1.20. johnny comes marching mambo
  • 1.21. real gone mambo
  • 1.22. mambo beat
  • 1.23. blues 'n' mambo
  • 1.24. mambo with moody
  • 1.25. bo mambo
  • 1.26. south parkway mambo
  • 1.27. goza mi mambo
  • 1.28. cuban mambo
  • 1.29. mambo blues
  • 1.30. jackie mambo
  • 2.1. big joe mambo
  • 2.2. helena mambo
  • 2.3. hi-beam mambo
  • 2.4. after hours mambo
  • 2.5. mambo jungle
  • 2.6. blues king mambo
  • 2.7. mambo baby
  • 2.8. guitarambo
  • 2.9. filatone's mambo
  • 2.10. mambo
  • 2.11. mambo blues
  • 2.12. mamboogie
  • 2.13. mambino
  • 2.14. sandman mambo
  • 2.15. clock mambo
  • 2.16. mambo's got the blues
  • 2.17. mambo twist
  • 2.18. slide's mambo
  • 2.19. t-town mambo
  • 2.20. mambo arribique
  • 2.21. mambo daddy
  • 2.22. st louis blues mambo
  • 2.23. mambo baby
  • 2.24. junior's mambo
  • 2.25. avalon mambo
  • 2.26. dragnet mambo
  • 2.27. lucky mambo
  • 2.28. judo mambo
  • 2.29. mambo holiday
  • 3.1. that's your last boogie
  • 3.2. t-bone blues
  • 3.3. . rhumba blues
  • 3.4. blues after hours
  • 3.5. fat meat 'n' greens
  • 3.6. mambo boogie
  • 3.7. back home blues
  • 3.8. cuba doll
  • 3.9. heartbreaker
  • 3.10. hound dog
  • 3.11. woke up this morning
  • 3.12. hey now baby
  • 3.13. country boy
  • 3.14. bon ton roula
  • 3.15. jock-o-mo
  • 3.16. mardi gras in new orleans
  • 3.17. tell me pretty baby
  • 3.18. hey little girl
  • 3.19. banana split
  • 3.20. early in the morning
  • 3.21. . i come from jamaica
  • 3.22. blues mambo
  • 3.23. my baby's gone
  • 3.24. roll and rumba
  • 3.25. i can't be satisfied
  • 3.26. mexican reminiscences
  • 4.1. lazy lester
  • 4.2. slim harpo
  • 4.3. muddy waters
  • 4.4. dale hawkins
  • 4.5. wynona carr
  • 4.6. guitar junior
  • 4.7. big "t" tyler
  • 4.8. andré williams
  • 4.9. art neville
  • 4.10. bobby freeman
  • 4.11. b.b. king
  • 4.12. tommy ridgley
  • 4.13. fats domino
  • 4.14. paul gayten
  • 4.15. eddie cochran
  • 4.16. richard berry
  • 4.17. charles sheffield
  • 4.18. bill doggett
  • 4.19. smokey hogg
  • 4.20. otis rush
  • 4.21. champion jack dupree
  • 4.22. screamin' jay hawkins
  • 4.23. bo diddley
  • 4.24. larry williams
  • 4.25. leonard carbo
  • 4.26. eddie lang
  • 4.27. screamin' joe neal
  • 4.28. the champs
  • 4.29. lavern baker
  • 4.30. albert collins
  • 4.31. memphis slim
  • 4.32. harry belafonte
  • 5.1. ray charles
  • 5.2. texas ray
  • 5.3. arthur alexander
  • 5.4. junior wells
  • 5.5. willie jones
  • 5.6. little willie john
  • 5.7. link wray
  • 5.8. james brown
  • 5.9. davey cortez
  • 5.10. ruth brown
  • 5.11. the coasters
  • 5.12. teddy randazzo
  • 5.13. curtis knight
  • 5.14. tal miller
  • 5.15. renaldo jackson
  • 5.16. the orioles
  • 5.17. barrett strong
  • 5.18. charles brown
  • 5.19. the isley brothers
  • 5.20. cozy cole
  • 5.21. bobby hebb
  • 5.22. andre williams
  • 5.23. phil upchurch
  • 5.24. buddy guy
  • 5.25. louis brooks
  • 5.26. the olympics
  • 5.27. ford eaglin
  • 5.28. chuck berry
  • 5.29. gary u.s. bonds
  • 5.30. huey piano smith
16. Juli 2021
Genre: Beat

various

rumba blues - mambo blues

RUMBA BLUES - MAMBO BLUES

5 CD  €  18,99
Not in stock. Delivery in Germany in approx. 12-14 working days depending on availability with the supplier.
price incl. VAT , excl. shipping

product info

Latin rhythms have infiltrated every branch of popular music, but none has had such a wide ranging influence as the rumba. It is this rhythm, combined with the New Orleans second line beat, that formed the basis of the Stax and Motown sound and the more complex rhythms of funk in the 1960s. But where would rock be without the cha-cha-cha? Think Respect, Satisfaction, Wild Thing... The mambo was born in Cuba in 1938, of African and European parentage but 1954 was the year of the mambo dance craze as record companies encouraged their R&B artists to come up with songs in a Latin vein and to include the word mambo in the title. The samba was next. It is the spring in the beat and the almost imperceptible skip at the end of each measure that differentiate ... read more