After nearly five decades in the music industry, Sheila E. has done something this year she’s never done before — dropped two new albums at once, each with a curious twist.
1) She’s delivered her first salsa album even though she doesn’t speak Spanish.
2) She’s selling a new R&B album, “Hella Fonke,” exclusively at concerts because, she figures, streaming doesn’t pay.
The salsa album, “Bailar,” has been in the works for five years. She’s enlisted some A-list collaborators, including Gloria Estefan, Ruben Blades and Gilberto Santa Rosa.
“It’s probably one of the best records I’ve done in a very long time,” said E., who returns to the Dakota in Minneapolis for three nights this week. “To do a record of salsa for the first time in my life was very challenging. It was a project. I don’t speak Spanish and so singing in Spanish is challenging.”
Moreover, E. (it’s short for Escovedo) was concerned about the precise rhythms because salsa “is totally different than Latin jazz,” said the lifelong salsa dancer. Yet, she wanted to make it authentic with a bit of her own Oakland R&B/Latin jazz flavor.
“Bailar” actually started as an R&B album. She had 10 to 15 songs that she shared with co-producer Tony Succar and “we flipped them to salsa” with new arrangements. She also covered three salsa classics as tributes to Tito Puente, Celia Cruz and the Fania All Stars.
“I actually played drums on the second half of the Celia Cruz song,” she pointed out. “No one plays a full kit on a salsa record. And I wanted to take a drum solo and that’s never been done, either. Again bringing those elements of who I am.”