Craft Latino continues celebrating the 60th anniversary of Fania Records by reissuing the unmistakable Nuyorican falsetto soul singer Ralfi Pagán’s self-titled debut album. His distinctive talent as a singer and songwriter gave him the ability to write and perform across multiple genres and two languages. He made anything he touched uniquely his own. The Latin soul legend made an impact with the five albums he recorded before his untimely death in 1978. A precursor to the Bronx-raised musician’s seminal album With Love, his ahead-of-its time 1969 release Ralfi Pagán dazzles with bilingual appeal thanks to balladic hits such as the English-language “Don’t Stop Now” and “Who Is the Girl For Me,” as well as the Spanish-sung “No soy de ti” and “El hijo de mamá.”
Arriving on September 6, and available for pre-order today, the artist’s rare Latin soul debut features (AAA) all-analog mastering, lacquers cut from the original master tapes by Kevin Gray at Cohearent Audio, 180-gram vinyl and a tip-on jacket replicating the original artwork. A 180-gram “Red Velvet” color vinyl variant (limited to 300 copies), with a bundle option that includes a collectible Fania N.Y.C. Latin Soul T-shirt and turntable mat, is available for pre-order at the Craft store. Additionally, the recording will make its debut in 192/24 HD digital audio.
Throughout the year, Craft Latino will honor Fania Records’ legacy—as well as the iconic label’s foundational contributions to salsa music—with reissues such as this one. Visit fania.com/fania-60th to learn more.
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Uniquely influenced by his Puerto Rican and Cuban mixed heritage, Ralfi Pagán was born in 1947 in the Bronx borough of New York City. Singing in both English and Spanish, the artist was proof that the power of soul music could transcend language. To that end, Pagán would go on to become one of first Latin artists to appear on Soul Train, while becoming an icon of the then-burgeoning Chicano music scene.
After a stint as a backing vocalist for King Nando’s Orchestra and dropping a mostly forgotten single in 1966, Pagán would go on to record his self-titled album for Fania Records in 1969. Legend has it, the musician walked into the Fania offices and wouldn’t relent until he could audition for label co-founder Jerry Masucci—which he did, on the spot. Impressed, Masucci connected Pagán with Fania’s recording director, Johnny Pacheco.
Produced by Kenny Vance (who’s done everything from producing The Warriors’ iconic soundtrack to briefly working as Saturday Night Live’s musical director), Ralfi Pagán would introduce the world to the singer’s love of soul, salsa and doo-wop—a rarified vision that reflected his cosmopolitan and multicultural sensibilities.
Fania Records initially released a version of Ralfi Pagán as an all-Spanish album, but realizing they had a star with mass appeal on their hands, reissued the LP with four English songs (which replaced four Spanish-language tracks). AllMusic remarked that Pagán’s silky falsetto was “far sweeter than Smokey Robinson or Eugene Record,” as evidenced by “two of the most unrepentant crossover ballads of the era,” the seductive, dulcet “Don’t Stop Now” and the lingering, lovesick album opener, “Who Is the Girl for Me.” They live alongside a pair of smooth Spanish-language standouts, “No soy de ti” and “El hijo de mamá,” which feel tailor-made for slow-dancing by a jukebox. Meanwhile, the boogaloo-influenced singalong “Latin Soul” could stand as Pagán’s anthem: an assertive, fun-loving celebration of the entwined genre he’d help pioneer.
With Ralfi Pagán serving a successful introduction to his wild talents, Pagán would score a bona fide hit upon the release of his second Fania album, With Love. Its alluring single “Make It With You,” a popular cover of a song from the pop-rock group Bread, would peak at No.32 on Billboard’s R&B chart in 1971, thus prompting his Soul Train appearance. Two years later, he likewise hit No.39 on that same chart with “Soul Je T’Aime,” a duet with Sylvia Robinson, the successful R&B singer who’d go on to become an immensely influential hip-hop producer-executive. Pagán, also popular in Latin and South America, would release three more albums with Fania Records before his tragic death in 1978 while touring Colombia. His murder there remains unsolved.
Looking back, Soul Tracks muses that Pagán—part Puerto Rican Smokey Robinson, part Cuban Curtis Mayfield—was “one of the most talented and versatile young singer/songwriters in the impressive Fania roster.” What he may have lacked in time, he more than overachieved in his music’s timeless impact.
About Fania Records’ 60th Anniversary Celebration:
2024 marks the 60th anniversary of the legendary New York label Fania Records, one of the most significant Latin labels in the world, musically and culturally. In the ’60s, Fania was a pioneer in creating and spreading the sound of salsa music from New York City to the globe. In addition to salsa, Fania is the definitive home for genres such as Latin big band, Afro-Cuban jazz, boogaloo and Latin soul. Its roster of artists includes countless music legends, such as Johnny Pacheco, Willie Colón, Héctor Lavoe, Celia Cruz, Tito Puente, Ray Barretto, Cheo Feliciano and Rubén Blades, among many others. In 1968, the creation of the international supergroup known as the Fania All-Stars, a vital force in Latin music, established the label’s signature musical style, which became known as the “Fania Sound.” Today, Fania’s legacy is just as meaningful to Latin music as Stax and Motown to soul or Prestige and Blue Note to jazz. It remains a cultural beacon, illuminating a powerful American immigrant story that is as timely today as when the label launched. To celebrate Fania’s legacy on this special milestone, Craft Latino will release over a dozen remastered 180-gram vinyl reissues, over two dozen remastered digital albums, many of which will debut in hi-res digital, and a variety of content throughout the year, including curated playlists, artist spotlights and live events across New York, Los Angeles, Miami and London.
Ralfi Pagán Tracklist (Vinyl):
Side A
- Who Is The Girl For Me
- Don’t Stop Now
- Latin Soul
- Seré Para Ti
- Ain’t No Big Thing
Side B
- El Hijo De Mamá
- Pelao
- Negrita
- Tipa Quema
- No Soy De Ti
*Digital tracklist mirrors the vinyl