
Craft Latino continues the year-long centennial celebration of Celia Cruz with a reissue for ‘Celia y Willie’
The timeless collaboration with legendary bandleader Willie Colón features “Dos jueyes,” plus the favorites “Latinos en Estados Unidos” and “Cucurucucú paloma”
Ongoing celebration throughout 2025 includes vinyl and digital reissues, playlists, video content, and more
Craft Latino continues the year-long centennial celebration of Celia Cruz with a reissue for Celia y Willie, her timeless collaboration with legendary bandleader Willie Colón. Featuring such favorites as “Dos jueyes,” “Latinos en Estados Unidos,” and “Cucurucucú paloma,” the 1981 release marked the second of three albums from the superstar pair. Arriving on June 6th, and available for pre-order today, Celia y Willie has been remastered from its original master tapes by Clint Holley and Dave Polster at Well Made Music and pressed on 180-gram vinyl. A limited-edition “Oro Suave” (soft gold) color vinyl variant (limited to 300 copies), with an exclusive bundle option that includes a collectible Vaya Records logo T-shirt, is available at Fania.com.
Throughout 2025, Craft Latino is honoring Celia Cruz and her incredible contributions to the musical landscape with a series of vinyl and digital reissues, playlists, video content, and more. Visit the Celia Cruz Centennial page for more details about the celebration. As one of the most influential Latin artists of all time, Cruz was an internationally beloved star who sold over 10 million records during her five-decade-long career. A ten-time GRAMMY® nominee, Cruz was honored throughout her life and beyond with numerous awards, exhibits, commemorative stamps, samples by major artists, and tributes, including a National Medal of the Arts, a Smithsonian Lifetime Achievement Award, a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, and a posthumous GRAMMY® Lifetime Achievement Award. Cruz was also inducted into the Billboard Latin Music Hall of Fame and the International Latin Music Hall of Fame, among others, while in 2024, she became the first Afro-Latina to appear on U.S. currency through the American Women’s Quarter Program.
Known around the world as “The Queen of Salsa,” legendary Cuban singer Celia Cruz (1925 – 2003) rose to fame in the early ’50s as a member of the celebrated vocal group, La Sonora Matancera. After a decade of hit records, film roles, and international tours, however, the singer was forced to flee her country, following the Cuban Revolution. Settling in New York City, Cruz launched a solo career, collaborating with the era’s biggest Latin stars—most famously Tito Puente—before signing to Fania Records imprint, Vaya Records, in the mid-’70s. There, Cruz embarked on her most successful era yet, beginning with the bestselling 1974 salsa classic, Celia & Johnny (with Fania co-founder Johnny Pacheco). Over the next few years, her star continued to rise, as she joined the legendary supergroup Fania All Stars and released a string of acclaimed albums, including the GRAMMY-nominated Eternos (with Pacheco) in 1978. This era also found Cruz branching out to collaborate with other Fania stars, including Pete Rodriguez (for 1980’s Celia, Johnny and Pete) and legendary bandleader, composer, and producer, Willie Colón.
A multiple GRAMMY and Latin GRAMMY nominee, Willie Colón (b. 1950) shaped the sound of salsa through his prolific work on and off the stage. A native of The Bronx, Colón launched his storied career at just 15 years-old when he signed to Fania Records. Partnering with another rising star, singer Héctor “El Cantante” Lavoe, Colón became a sensation in the Latin music scene—thanks in large part to the duo’s 11 genre-defining albums, including 1967’s El malo, 1970’s Cosa nuestra, and the 1971 Christmas classic, Asalto Navideño.
By the mid-’70s, however, Colón had shifted his focus to projects behind the scenes as a composer, producer, arranger, and musical director. This era also found him exploring a variety of solo projects and broadening his network of collaborators, working with the likes of Rubén Blades and Celia Cruz. The latter partnership—between the “Queen of Salsa” and “El Malo del Bronx”—began with 1977’s Only They Could Have Made This Album. The dynamic pairing, which featured Cruz on vocals and Colón as producer and bass trumpeter, would prove to be highly successful.
Among the highlights are the electric hit “Dos jueyes,” the vivacious “Kirimbambara,” and “Mi caso,” an empowering tune that declares multiple reasons why a woman would not want to get married. Other standout tracks include the socially conscious “Latinos en Estados Unidos” and a salsa-fied cover of the iconic Mexican song “Cucurucucú paloma,” as well as the irresistible “Come Down to Miami.” Despite the English title, the latter tune is primarily in Spanish and encourages New York-based Latinos to escape the cold and relocate to sunny Miami.
Celia y Willie proved the pair’s magic, once again, while the album’s popularity found Cruz and Colón reuniting one more time for 1987’s Winners. Today, more than four decades after its release, the 1981 LP remains a salsa classic. AllMusic writes that a Cruz/Colón collaboration “is to salseros what a Marvin Gaye/Tammi Terrell duet is to soul lovers or an Ella Fitzgerald/Louis Armstrong project is to jazz enthusiasts; in other words, you’re bringing together two of the best artists that the genre has to offer. When Cruz and Colon get together, the sparks usually fly—and Celia y Willie is no exception.”
Vinyl Tracklist:
Side A
Mi caso
Cucurucucú paloma
Ya lo puedes decir
Latinos en Estados Unidos
Berimbau
Side B
Dos jueyes
Kirimbambara
Come Down to Miami
Apaga la luz
Hay que recordar
*Digital tracklist mirrors Vinyl
Click here to pre-order Celia y Willie.
Click here to find the exclusive bundle including the “Oro Suave” color vinyl with a collectible Vaya Records T-shirt.
About Fania:
Highly influential, both musically and culturally, Fania Records spread the sound of salsa music from the clubs of New York City to the rest of the world and became a revered global brand in the process. Fania’s master recording catalog is the definitive home for genres such as Latin big band, Afro-Cuban jazz, boogaloo, salsa and Latin R&B and includes artistic giants such as Celia Cruz, Willie Colón, Héctor Lavoe and Rubén Blades. With the creation of the international supergroup known as the Fania All-Stars, the label’s signature musical style became known as the “Fania Sound.” Fania’s rich master catalog also includes the Pete Rodriguez’s boogaloo classic “I Like It Like That” which was sampled by Cardi B in her #1 hit “I Like It.” Additionally, three Fania Recordings, Celia & Johnny by Celia Cruz and Johnny Pacheco, Azucar Pa’ Ti by Eddie Palmieri and Live at Yankee Stadium by the Fania All-Stars, appear in the National Recording Registry, a list of sound recordings that “are culturally, historically or aesthetically important, and/or inform or reflect life in the United States.” For more info, visit Fania.com and follow on YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and TikTok.
About Craft Latino:
Craft Latino is home to one of the largest and most prestigious collections of Latin music master recordings and compositions in the world. Its rich and storied repertoire includes legendary artists such as Antonio Aguilar, Joan Sebastian, Pepe Aguilar, Celia Cruz, Héctor Lavoe, Willie Colón, Ray Barretto, La Lupe, Ruben Blades and the Fania All Stars, to name just a few. Renowned imprints with catalogs issued under the Craft banner include Musart, Fania, TH,
Craft Latino is the Latin repertoire arm of Craft Recordings. The catalog label team for Concord. For more info, visit CraftRecordings.com.
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- I'm Al Mega the CEO of Comic Crusaders, CEO of the Undercover Capes Podcast Network, CEO of Geekery Magazine & Owner of Splintered Press (coming soon). I'm a fan of comics, cartoons and old school video games. Make sure to check out our podcasts/vidcasts and more!