Salsa 1988 Info
For those who lived it—or those discovering it on YouTube rabbit holes today— Salsa 1988 remains untouchable. By 1988, the Fania All-Stars' heyday was fading, but the legend was far from over. Instead of a decline, we saw a beautiful fragmentation of sound. The "Masters" were still releasing bangers, but a new generation of bandleaders was demanding the floor.
You cannot talk about '88 without mentioning the "Romantic Era." Eddie Santiago was the heartthrob, and Lluvia (Rain) was the soundtrack to a million slow dances. That opening piano riff? Instant chills. It’s sad, it’s sexy, and it swings. salsa 1988
This was the year of the sneaking into the brass section—just a touch, not enough to kill the vibe, but enough to make the records sound massive on club speakers. The Anthems You Know (And The Deep Cuts You Need) If you were at the Copa or the Palladium (or the local community center in the Bronx or Cali, Colombia) in 1988, you were dancing to these: For those who lived it—or those discovering it