Latin, French, Italian The best music site on the web there is where you can read about and listen to blues, jazz, classical music and much more. This is your ultimate music resource. Tons of albums can be found within. http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/latin-french-italian/363.html Sun, 19 May 2024 18:33:59 +0000 Joomla! 1.5 - Open Source Content Management en-gb Jose Feliciano - 10 To 23 (1969) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/latin-french-italian/363-josefeliciano/643-10to23.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/latin-french-italian/363-josefeliciano/643-10to23.html Jose Feliciano - 10 To 23 (1969)


01. Amor Jibaro (recording of José Feliciano at age 10)
02. First Of May
03. The Windmills Of Your Mind
04. By The Time I Get To Phoenix
05. Miss Otis Regrets
06. Little Red Rooster
07. She's A Woman
08. Lady Madonna
09. Rain (ft. Perry Botkin Jr.)
10. Goota Get A Message To You
11. Hey Jude

José Feliciano - Vocals, Congas, Twelve-String Guitar, Guitar

 

Coming off the awesome and well-deserved success of "Light My Fire" Jose Feliciano was give more free reign and a larger budget to work with at R.C.A. Records, and he uses it to his full advantage here on 10 To 23. The album opens up with an archival recording of a very young (10 years old) Feliciano performing a Mariachi number. It's scratchy, funky and completely charming. The rest of the album features some of the finer pop songs of the day and show Feliciano to be one of the great interpreters of his time. The instrumental of "By The Time I Get To Phoenix" will pull at your heartstrings, and the theme from "A Thomas Crown Affair," "The Windmills Of Your Mind" is equally impressive. There is also a great blues, "Little Red Rooster," which is read in the unequaled Feliciano style. All in all, an awesome record. ---Matthew Greenwald, Rovi

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluelover) Jose Feliciano Thu, 15 Oct 2009 11:55:44 +0000
Jose Feliciano - Duets (2014) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/latin-french-italian/363-josefeliciano/19373-jose-feliciano-duets-2014.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/latin-french-italian/363-josefeliciano/19373-jose-feliciano-duets-2014.html Jose Feliciano - Duets (2014)

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1. Para Decir Adios (With Ana Gabriel) (3:58)
2. Despues De Ti Que (With Cristian Castro) (5:26)
3. Que Sera (With Raul Di Blasio) (5:30)
4. Paso La Vida Pensando (With Ramon Ayala) (3:57)
5. Perdidos (With Milly Quezada) (4:00)
6. Las Llaves De Mi Alma (With Vicente Fernandez) (2:59)
7. Mar Y Cielo (With RKM & Ken-Y) (3:05)
8. Que Nadie Sepa Mi Sufrir (With Alicia Villarreal) (3:23)
9. Te Solte La Rienda (With Los Horoscopos De Durango) (2:39)
10. Lamento Borincano (With Luis Fonsi) (4:17)
11. Un Mundo Raro (With Lupillo Rivera) (3:15)

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluelover) Jose Feliciano Fri, 11 Mar 2016 17:13:22 +0000
Jose Feliciano - Estival Jazz Lugano 1994 http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/latin-french-italian/363-josefeliciano/23420-jose-feliciano-estival-jazz-lugano-1994.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/latin-french-italian/363-josefeliciano/23420-jose-feliciano-estival-jazz-lugano-1994.html Jose Feliciano - Estival Jazz Lugano 1994

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01. Ponte A Cantar [5:15]
02. Rain [3:30]
03. Affirmation [5:44]
04. Chico And The Man [4:04]
05. Right Here Waiting [4:09]
06. Bamboleo [6:43]
07. Time After Time [4:01]
08. Last Time [4:07]
09. Jealous Guy [4:46]
10. Purple Haze [4:09]
11. Samba Pa Ti [4:25]
12. Malaguena [5:10]
13. Light My Fire [2:25]
14. Band Introductions [2:52]
15. Instrumental [2:51]
16. Che Sara [3:23]
17. Money (That`s What I Want) [2:51]
18. I`m Too Sexy [2:44] 

Jose Feliciano - vocals, guitar
Kenneth Owens - electric bass
Wendell "Tiger" McNeal - drums
Robert Conti - percussion
Gregory Smith - keyboards 

Piazza Della Riforma, Lugano, Switzerland
29. June 1994 

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluelover) Jose Feliciano Tue, 01 May 2018 13:44:29 +0000
José Feliciano ‎– Feliz Navidad (1970/2011) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/latin-french-italian/363-josefeliciano/18905-jose-feliciano--feliz-navidad-19702011.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/latin-french-italian/363-josefeliciano/18905-jose-feliciano--feliz-navidad-19702011.html José Feliciano ‎– Feliz Navidad (1970/2011)

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1 	Feliz Navidad 	3:02
2 	Jingle Bells 	2:59
3 	The Christmas Song 	3:21
4 	The First Noel 	3:01
5 	The Cherry Tree Carol 	3:45
6 	The Little Drummer Boy 	4:00
7 	White Christmas 	3:59
8 	We Three Kings Of Orient Are 	2:13
9 	Mary's Little Boy Child 	4:42
10 	It Came Upon A Midnight Clear 	1:53
11 	Silent Night 	4:01
12 	Hark,The Herald Angels Sing 	1:41

José Feliciano - Bass, Guitar [Classical], Cuatro, Vocals
Paulinho Magalhaes - Drums, Percussion
Perry Botkin, Jr. – arranger

 

This is one of the best Christmas albums ever recorded. The amazing genius of Jose Feliciano shines thru in every song. On this record Jose goes back to a style of simplicity which he's always been known for. All of the songs were recorded with very little instrumentation. In fact the only other instrument that appears on the album besides Jose's guitar is a little of percussion and very little drums too little to really notice. Jose's voice is smooth and clear as a bell and the emotion that he puts into everyone of these holiday standards is evident when you hear the album. I love the guitar instrumentals like "Jingle Bells" and "Santa Claus Is Coming To Town" which has Jose really rocking with the acoustic guitar really excellent. "Las Posadas" is a beautiful song like "Santa Claus" that was not included in the original LP released in 1970. Felciano's mellow and easy going style is pure and honest and you can't help but to be deeply moved by this beautiful song sung in his native tongue. This is a beautiful album that is a timeless classic and will be enjoyed from generation to generation. ---Carlos Rodriguez, amazon.com

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluelover) Jose Feliciano Sat, 12 Dec 2015 16:49:07 +0000
José Feliciano – Bamboleo (2012) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/latin-french-italian/363-josefeliciano/16731-jose-feliciano-bamboleo-2012.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/latin-french-italian/363-josefeliciano/16731-jose-feliciano-bamboleo-2012.html José Feliciano – Bamboleo (2012)

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1 Angela Mia	00:03:39 
2 Bamboleo	00:06:49 
3 Che Sera	00:04:03 
4 In My Life	00:03:21 
5 La Bamba	00:02:53 
6 Malaguena	00:04:47 
7 Mule Skinner Blues	00:02:41 
8 Peago	00:02:39 
9 Rain	00:02:35 
10 Samba Pa Ti		00:03:48 
11 Time After Time	00:03:15 
12 Volvere	00:04:06

 

One of the most prominent Latin-born performers of the pop era, singer/guitarist Jose Feliciano was born September 10, 1945, in Lares, Puerto Rico; the victim of congenital glaucoma, he was left permanently blind at birth. Five years later, he and his family moved to New York City's Spanish Harlem area; there Feliciano began learning the accordion, later taking up the guitar and making his first public appearance at the Bronx's El Teatro Puerto Rico at the age of nine. While in high school he became a fixture of the Greenwich Village coffeehouse circuit, eventually quitting school in 1962 in order to accept a permanent gig in Detroit; a contract with RCA followed a performance at New York's Gerde's Folk City, and within two years he appeared at the Newport Jazz Festival. After bowing with the 1964 novelty single "Everybody Do the Click," he issued his flamenco-flavored debut LP The Voice and Guitar of Jose Feliciano, trailed early the next year by The Fantastic Feliciano.

Unhappy with the direction of his music following the release of 1966's A Bag Full of Soul, Feliciano returned to his roots, releasing three consecutive Spanish-language LPs -- Sombras...Una Voz, Una Guitarra, Mas Exitos de Jose Feliciano and El Sentimiento, La Voz y La Guitarra de Jose Feliciano -- on RCA International, scoring on the Latin pop charts with the singles "La Copa Rota" and "Amor Gitana." With 1968's Feliciano!, he scored a breakthrough hit with a soulful reading of the Doors' "Light My Fire" that launched him into the mainstream pop stratosphere; a smash cover of Tommy Tucker's R&B chestnut "Hi Heel Sneakers" solidified his success, and soon Feliciano found himself performing the national anthem during the 1968 World Series. His idiosyncratic Latin-jazz performance of the song proved highly controversial, and despite the outcry of traditionalists and nationalists, his status as an emerging counterculture hero was secured, with a single of his rendition also becoming a hit.

In 1969 Feliciano recorded three LPs -- Souled, Alive Alive-O, and Feliciano 10 to 23 -- and won a Grammy for Best New Artist; however, he never again equalled the success of "Light My Fire," and only the theme song to the sitcom Chico and the Man subsequently achieved hit status, edging into the Top 100 singles chart in 1974. Throughout the 1970s Feliciano remained an active performer, however, touring annually and issuing a number of LPs in both English and Spanish, including 1973's Steve Cropper-produced Compartments; he also appeared on the Joni Mitchell hit "Free Man in Paris," and guested on a number of television series including Kung Fu and McMillan and Wife. In 1980 Feliciano was the first performer signed to the new Latin division of Motown, making his label debut with an eponymous effort the following year; his recorded output tapered off during the course of the decade, although he occasionally resurfaced with LPs including 1987's Tu Immenso Amor and 1989's I'm Never Gonna Change. A school in East Harlem was renamed the Jose Feliciano Performing Arts School in his honor; in 1996, he also appeared briefly in the hit film Fargo. --- Jason Ankeny, Rovi

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluelover) Jose Feliciano Sun, 19 Oct 2014 16:05:28 +0000
Jose Feliciano – Feliciano! (1968) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/latin-french-italian/363-josefeliciano/3909-jose-feliciano-feliciano-1968.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/latin-french-italian/363-josefeliciano/3909-jose-feliciano-feliciano-1968.html Jose Feliciano – Feliciano! (1968)

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1 California Dreamin' (Phillips, Phillips) 4:12
2 Light My Fire (Densmore, Krieger, Krieger, Manzarek, Morrison) 3:37
3 Don't Let the Sun Catch You Crying (Marsden) 2:53
4 In My Life (Lennon, McCartney) 3:15
5 And I Love Her (Lennon, McCartney) 4:13
6 Nena Na Na (Ben) 2:33
7 (There's) Always Something There to Remind Me (Bacharach, David) 3:05
8 Just a Little Bit of Rain (Neil) 2:52
9 Sunny (Hebb, Kern) 3:34
10 Here, There and Everywhere (Lennon, McCartney) 2:09
11 The Last Thing on My Mind (Paxton) 4:54

Ray Brown / Bass
José Feliciano / Guitar, Vocals
Milt Holland / Percussion
Jim Horn / Flute, Flute (Alto)
José Feliciano - guitar, vocals, arrangements Ray Brown - double bass Milt Holland - percussion Jim Horn - alto flute, recorder George Tipton - orchestration, string & woodwind arrangements

 

Released at the apex of his popularity, this was Feliciano's most successful album. It reached number two, largely on the strength of his only big hit single, "Light My Fire" (which is featured here). Soulful easy listening is an oxymoron, but this is about as close as that fusion gets to reality, with passionate vocals and virtuosic flamenco guitar. Besides "Light My Fire," it's dominated by interpretations of '60s hits like "Sunny" and "California Dreamin'," as well as three Lennon-McCartney tunes. Noted jazz bassist Ray Brown is one of the supporting musicians. ---Richie Unterberger, Rovi

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluelover) Jose Feliciano Tue, 16 Mar 2010 12:17:48 +0000
Jose Feliciano – Lo Esencial De Jose Feliciano (2011) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/latin-french-italian/363-josefeliciano/10357-jose-feliciano-lo-esencial-de-jose-feliciano-2011.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/latin-french-italian/363-josefeliciano/10357-jose-feliciano-lo-esencial-de-jose-feliciano-2011.html Jose Feliciano – Lo Esencial De Jose Feliciano (2011)

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CD1
01 – QUE SERA
02 – LA COPA ROTA
03 – EL RELOJ
04 – DOS COSAS
05 – NOCHE DE RONDA
06 – VOLVER
07 – VERDAD AMARGA
08 – PIEL CANELA
09 – SABOR A M+
10 – LO MISMO QUE A USTED
11 – CORAZON, PORQUE LA QUIERES
12 – LA CARCEL DE SING SING
13 – EL CIEGO
14 – NO LLORES M¦S
15 – CAMINO VERDE
16 – YA SE FUE						play
17 – NOSOTROS
18 – QUÉDATE CON TU DINERO
19 – LA BARCA
20 – GUANTANAMERA
21 – EL JINETE

CD2
01 – AMOR GITANO
02 – USTED
03 – SIN FE
04 – REGALAME ESTA NOCHE
05 – MARIA ISABEL
06 – MIÉNTEME
07 – CONTIGO EN LA DISTANCIA
08 – LUZ Y SOMBRA
09 – MOLIENDO CAFÉ
10 – FALSA MONEDA
11 – CELOSO							play
12 – SABRA DIOS
13 – EXTRAÑOS EN LA NOCHE
14 – DIOS EN TUS OJOS
15 – TODA UNA VIDA
16 – ESCANDALO
17 – CORAZON DE ACERO
18 – ESTOY PERDIDO
19 – PLAZOS TRAICIONEROS
20 – MIS NOCHES SIN TI
21 – UNA AVENTURA MAS

CD3
01 – POR ELLA (A DTO CON JOSÉ JOSÉ)
02 – UN AMOR AS+ (A DTO CON LANNI HALL)
03 – VUÉLVEME A QUERER
04 – DESPUÉS DE TI QUÉ
05 – TU RECUERDO Y YO (A DUETO CON JOSÉ ALFREDO JIMÉNEZ)
06 – ABAZAME
07 – SOMBRAS
08 – PECADO MORTAL
09 – PEGAO
10 – SAMBA PA’ TI
11 – QUE VOY A HACER SIN TI
12 – CELOS DE MI GUITARRA
13 – POR SEGUIR TUS HUELLAS					play
14 – CALIFORNIA DREAMIN’
15 – LIGHT MY FIRE
16 – SUSIE-Q
17 – LE LO LAI
18 – FELIZ NAVIDAD

 

One of the most prominent Latin-born performers of the pop era, singer/guitarist Jose Feliciano was born September 10, 1945, in Lares, Puerto Rico; the victim of congenital glaucoma, he was left permanently blind at birth. Five years later, he and his family moved to New York City's Spanish Harlem area; there Feliciano began learning the accordion, later taking up the guitar and making his first public appearance at the Bronx's El Teatro Puerto Rico at the age of nine. While in high school he became a fixture of the Greenwich Village coffeehouse circuit, eventually quitting school in 1962 in order to accept a permanent gig in Detroit; a contract with RCA followed a performance at New York's Gerde's Folk City, and within two years he appeared at the Newport Jazz Festival. After bowing with the 1964 novelty single "Everybody Do the Click," he issued his flamenco-flavored debut LP The Voice and Guitar of Jose Feliciano, trailed early the next year by The Fantastic Feliciano.

Unhappy with the direction of his music following the release of 1966's A Bag Full of Soul, Feliciano returned to his roots, releasing three consecutive Spanish-language LPs -- Sombras...Una Voz, Una Guitarra, Mas Exitos de Jose Feliciano and El Sentimiento, La Voz y La Guitarra de Jose Feliciano -- on RCA International, scoring on the Latin pop charts with the singles "La Copa Rota" and "Amor Gitana." With 1968's Feliciano!, he scored a breakthrough hit with a soulful reading of the Doors' "Light My Fire" that launched him into the mainstream pop stratosphere; a smash cover of Tommy Tucker's R&B chestnut "Hi Heel Sneakers" solidified his success, and soon Feliciano found himself performing the national anthem during the 1968 World Series. His idiosyncratic Latin-jazz performance of the song proved highly controversial, and despite the outcry of traditionalists and nationalists, his status as an emerging counterculture hero was secured, with a single of his rendition also becoming a hit.

In 1969 Feliciano recorded three LPs -- Souled, Alive Alive-O, and Feliciano 10 to 23 -- and won a Grammy for Best New Artist; however, he never again equalled the success of "Light My Fire," and only the theme song to the sitcom Chico and the Man subsequently achieved hit status, edging into the Top 100 singles chart in 1974. Throughout the 1970s Feliciano remained an active performer, however, touring annually and issuing a number of LPs in both English and Spanish, including 1973's Steve Cropper-produced Compartments; he also appeared on the Joni Mitchell hit "Free Man in Paris," and guested on a number of television series including Kung Fu and McMillan and Wife. In 1980 Feliciano was the first performer signed to the new Latin division of Motown, making his label debut with an eponymous effort the following year; his recorded output tapered off during the course of the decade, although he occasionally resurfaced with LPs including 1987's Tu Immenso Amor and 1989's I'm Never Gonna Change. A school in East Harlem was renamed the Jose Feliciano Performing Arts School in his honor; in 1996, he also appeared briefly in the hit film Fargo. --- Jason Ankeny, allmusic.com

 

José Feliciano (właściwie José Montserrate Feliciano García, ur. 10 września 1945 w Lares) - niewidomy portorykański kompozytor, autor tekstów i gitarzysta. Wykonawca popularnych piosenek pochodzenia południowoamerykańskiego, również utworów bluesowych i soulowych, najbardziej znane piosenki to Che sarà, Malaguena, Masters of War, Hitchcock Railway, Life Is That Way, Cuando Pienso En Ti, Sin Luz.

Feliciano urodził się w Lares w Portoryko jako jedno z jedenaściorga dzieci. Jest niewidomy, co jest skutkiem wrodzonej jaskry. Od dziecka edukował się muzycznie. W wieku pięciu lat jego rodzina przeniosła się do Nowego Jorku. W wieku lat siedemnastu zakończył szkołę i zajął się grą w klubach, występował też w Detroit. ---wiki

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluelover) Jose Feliciano Tue, 27 Sep 2011 18:21:40 +0000
José Feliciano – The Best Of Jose Feliciano (1999) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/latin-french-italian/363-josefeliciano/15898-jose-feliciano-the-best-of-jose-feliciano-1999.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/latin-french-italian/363-josefeliciano/15898-jose-feliciano-the-best-of-jose-feliciano-1999.html José Feliciano – The Best Of Jose Feliciano (1999)

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1 	The Last Time 	
2 	Right Here Waiting 	
3 	La Bamba 	
4 	Rain 	
5 	Light My Fire 	
6 	California Dreamin' 	
7 	Daniel 	
8 	Affirmation 	
9 	Stay With Me 	
10 	You Send Me 	
11 	Mule Skinner Blues 	
12 	Chico And The Man 	
13 	Jealous Guy 	
14 	Angela 	
15 	Y Volver 	
16 	In My Life 	
17 	Hi-heel Sneakers 	
18 	Che Sera Sera

 

One of the most prominent Latin-born performers of the pop era, singer/guitarist Jose Feliciano was born September 10, 1945, in Lares, Puerto Rico; the victim of congenital glaucoma, he was left permanently blind at birth. Five years later, he and his family moved to New York City's Spanish Harlem area; there Feliciano began learning the accordion, later taking up the guitar and making his first public appearance at the Bronx's El Teatro Puerto Rico at the age of nine. While in high school he became a fixture of the Greenwich Village coffeehouse circuit, eventually quitting school in 1962 in order to accept a permanent gig in Detroit; a contract with RCA followed a performance at New York's Gerde's Folk City, and within two years he appeared at the Newport Jazz Festival. After bowing with the 1964 novelty single "Everybody Do the Click," he issued his flamenco-flavored debut LP The Voice and Guitar of Jose Feliciano, trailed early the next year by The Fantastic Feliciano.

Unhappy with the direction of his music following the release of 1966's A Bag Full of Soul, Feliciano returned to his roots, releasing three consecutive Spanish-language LPs -- Sombras...Una Voz, Una Guitarra, Mas Exitos de Jose Feliciano and El Sentimiento, La Voz y La Guitarra de Jose Feliciano -- on RCA International, scoring on the Latin pop charts with the singles "La Copa Rota" and "Amor Gitana." With 1968's Feliciano!, he scored a breakthrough hit with a soulful reading of the Doors' "Light My Fire" that launched him into the mainstream pop stratosphere; a smash cover of Tommy Tucker's R&B chestnut "Hi Heel Sneakers" solidified his success, and soon Feliciano found himself performing the national anthem during the 1968 World Series. His idiosyncratic Latin-jazz performance of the song proved highly controversial, and despite the outcry of traditionalists and nationalists, his status as an emerging counterculture hero was secured, with a single of his rendition also becoming a hit.

In 1969 Feliciano recorded three LPs -- Souled, Alive Alive-O, and Feliciano 10 to 23 -- and won a Grammy for Best New Artist; however, he never again equalled the success of "Light My Fire," and only the theme song to the sitcom Chico and the Man subsequently achieved hit status, edging into the Top 100 singles chart in 1974. Throughout the 1970s Feliciano remained an active performer, however, touring annually and issuing a number of LPs in both English and Spanish, including 1973's Steve Cropper-produced Compartments; he also appeared on the Joni Mitchell hit "Free Man in Paris," and guested on a number of television series including Kung Fu and McMillan and Wife. In 1980 Feliciano was the first performer signed to the new Latin division of Motown, making his label debut with an eponymous effort the following year; his recorded output tapered off during the course of the decade, although he occasionally resurfaced with LPs including 1987's Tu Immenso Amor and 1989's I'm Never Gonna Change. A school in East Harlem was renamed the Jose Feliciano Performing Arts School in his honor; in 1996, he also appeared briefly in the hit film Fargo. ---Jason Ankeny, Rovi

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluelover) Jose Feliciano Mon, 21 Apr 2014 16:07:47 +0000