Artist: Various Artists
Title Of Album: Chicano Power: Latin  Rock in the USA 1968-1976
Year Of Release: 1998
Label: Soul  Jazz Records / CD39
Genre: Funk, Soul, Latin, Rock 
Total  Time: 1:16:14
Format: Mp3 
Quality: CBR 320 kbps / Lossless 
Total Size: 184  mb / 502 mb
RACKLIST:
Disc  1
1 Sapo - Been Had
2 Black Sugar - Too Late
3 Chango - Mira  Pa CA
4 Harvey Averne Presents The Barrio Band - Cayuco
5 Tierra - Sun  God
6 Benitez - Night Life
7 Malo - Street Man
8 El Chicano - Ron Con  Con
9 Mother Night - Fools Are You
Disc 2
1 Santana - Soul  Sacrifice
2 Black Sugar - Viajecito
3 Toro - Ramona
4 Malo - Pana
5  The Antiques - Chauca
6 Benitez - Butterfly
7 Azteca - Azteca Theme
8  Sapo - Sapo's Montuno
- Clique Aqui:
These two CDs contain 17 tracks by Latin bands throughout the  U.S. who fused rock, jazz, and Latin music in the late 1960s and 1970s. The  title is a trifle misleading; although Mexican-American bands from Los Angeles and San Francisco are well represented on the  set, it also includes Puerto Rican-American artists and groups from New York and  Miami. There are also a couple cuts from the Peruvian band Black Sugar, included  to illustrate the influence of U.S. Latin rock in Latin America itself. At any  rate, it's a great collection of a genre that, other than the hit records by  Santana of course, is largely overlooked by mainstream rock history and poorly  represented on reissues. It should be noted that the tracks by larger ensembles  with several horn players and percussionists can sound rather more like salsa music with a rock influence, rather than  the other way around (not that that's a bad thing). Cuts like Black Sugar's  "Viajecito," for instance, could fit well on a salsa radio station but for the  obvious touches of contemporary rock, usually in the guitar. In "Viajecito," for  example, there's a wild "Shaft"-like psychedelic guitar that runs through the  entirety of what otherwise is a fairly standard Latin pop-jazz song; Tierra's  "Sun God" kicks off with crazy synthesizers reminiscent of those heard on Pink  Floyd's "On the Run." The influence of Santana is felt mightily throughout,  particularly in the more rock-oriented bands, like Miami's the Antiques, whose  "Chauca" is like early Santana with a dash of the Yardbirds,  and a real highlight of the collection. The Santana comparisons are not always  coincidental: Carlos Santana's brother Jorge Santana played guitar in Malo, and  onetime Santana member Coke Escovedo founded Azteca. At its best, this  collection, like early Santana, is an intoxicating mix of rock, R&B,  psychedelia, jazz, and Latin music; even at its least impressive, it's still  pretty enjoyable. Santana themselves are represented by the song that's probably  the apex of the whole musical movement,  "Soul Sacrifice." The only major complaint one could offer is that 75 minutes of music is  spread throughout two discs, and could have been combined onto one CD. As  compensation, there's a 40-page booklet with information on the groups and the  sociopolitical factors that gave birth to the style.