Made in NuYoRico : Fania Records, Latin music, & salsa's Nuyorican meanings /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Negrón, Marisol, 1971- author.
Imprint:Durham : Duke University Press, 2024.
©2024
Description:xvi, 328 pages: illustrations ; 23 cm.
Language:English
Series:Refiguring American music
Refiguring American music.
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/13561145
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Varying Form of Title:Fania Records, Latin music, and salsa's Nuyorican meanings
ISBN:9781478030898
1478030895
9781478026662
1478026669
9781478059875
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary:"Made in NuYoRico traces the cross-cultural history of salsa within New York's diasporic Puerto Rican communities, interrogating salsa's use of the Nuyorican imaginary. Drawing on ethnographic interviews and a diverse archive of primary sources, Marisol Negrón explores how salsa's Nuyorican musical and non-musical practices produced an alternative public sphere that acted as a crucible for cultural expression and political rebellion. Covering the 50-year period between 1964-2014, the book follows salsa's social life, from the early days of revelry and aesthetic development characterized by the music label Fania Records, to the afterlife of the salsa boom that informed commercial, legal, and social imaginaries in both Puerto Rico and the United States. Through this historical mapping and contextualization of salsa, Negrón demonstrates how New York's diasporic Puerto Rican communities contested colonial power and the trauma of displacement with creative agency"--
Other form:Online version: Negrón, Marisol, 1971- Made in NuYoRico. Durham : Duke University Press, 2024 9781478059875
Review by Library Journal Review

In the 1970s, New York-based Fania Records was a dominant force in salsa music. The Latin music label stylized the genre's cultural aesthetics with popular songs from its "bad boys" Willie Colón and Héctor LaVoe, among others. It arguably created the soundtrack of NYC's working-class Puerto Rican-diaspora (a.k.a. Nuyorican) neighborhoods. But by the mid-1980s, waning record sales and lawsuits from its recording artists, like singer-songwriter Rubén Blades, threatened Fania's existence. Using interviews, archival material, and court documents, Negrón (American studies and Latino studies, Univ. of Massachusetts, Boston) deftly analyzes various songs from Fania's catalogue. She also takes a deep dive into LaVoe's life and his signature song, "El Cantante," which Blades wrote. In the first chapter, an almost shot-by-shot synopsis of Our Latin Thing, the label's 1972 musical documentary, provides insight into later chapters on salsa's commercialization and Fania's legal troubles. VERDICT Written more like a commentary on Fania's cultural significance to Latin music and Nuyorican culture than an overall history, this work will be of interest to diehard fans of salsa and music professors.--Anjelica Rufus-Barnes

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Review by Library Journal Review