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Interview With Salsa Musician Marlow Rosado

Orun is a deeper, almost meditative recording and Rosado’s first Latin jazz album. (He interprets the Yoruba word as meaning a protective ancestral spirit.) The album also marks the first time the Puerto Rican musician has worked with Afro-Cuban jazz legend Chucho Valdés. The veteran musician is a guest artist on the track, “Marlow y Chucho,” which Rosado wrote. “I was able to produce two amazing albums,” Rosado says. “They are very special because they came from a place of despair of what’s going to happen, I’ve got nothing to do, no work, nowhere to go to a place of hope for the future.”

Retro Baltimore: Orioles pitcher-turned-broadcaster Jim Palmer had a nearly perfect Opening Day record

He’s 75 now, half a lifetime removed from his playing days, but there will still be a twitch in Jim Palmer’s right arm Thursday when baseball season arrives.

Larry Harlow Running In Ward 2

A long-time sports volunteer is looking to get a seat around the Saint John Common Council table. Larry Harlow has put his name forward for one of two.

Larry Harlow Running In Ward 2

Larry Harlow Running In Ward 2
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Leon Gast, Oscar-winning director of the Rumble in the Jungle documentary When We Were Kings – obituary

Leon Gast, Oscar-winning director of the ‘Rumble in the Jungle’ documentary When We Were Kings – obituary Telegraph Obituaries © Patrick Downs/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images Leon Gast in 1997 - Patrick Downs/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images Leon Gast, who has died aged 85, was an American filmmaker best known for his documentary When We Were Kings about the “Rumble in the Jungle” boxing match between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman in 1974; the two decades it took Gast to bring his footage of the fight to the screen were vindicated when the film triumphed at the Oscars in 1996. The bout was staged in Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo) by the promoter Don King, who had convinced the country’s dictator, Mobutu Sese Seko, to put up a purse of $10 million on the basis that the televising of the fight would hugely enhance Zaire’s profile. Funding was also contributed by Colonel Gaddafi, Libya’s ruler.

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