Released in 1991 on Joey Gardner’s Latin League / WEA Latina imprint, Flavor Of The Latin arrived just as acts like Kid Frost (on the West Coast) and The Latin Empire (NYC) were gaining traction. But Lisa M—born Lisa Márquez—brought something different: a brash, unapologetic female voice in a genre dominated by male acts. Her delivery was sharp, her confidence electric.
Now available in a pristine FLAC rip from the original US CD pressing, this album is more than a nostalgia piece—it’s a time capsule of a moment when Latin youth were claiming their space in hip-hop on their own terms. Lisa M - Flavor Of The Latin -1991- US CD FLAC ...
Lisa M didn’t go on to become a household name like Ivy Queen or Cardi B, but her influence is unmistakable. Flavor Of The Latin predicted the Latin urban explosion of the late ’90s and 2000s—from Big Pun to Daddy Yankee’s reggaeton pivot. For crate-diggers, Latin hip-hop historians, and anyone who loves when a drum machine meets a tumbao , this CD in lossless quality is essential. Released in 1991 on Joey Gardner’s Latin League
The title track, “Flavor Of The Latin,” remains an underground anthem—a bilingual brag over a bouncing Miami bass groove that samples and shouts out Eddie Palmieri’s La Malanga . “El Gran Varón” flips Willie Colón’s social commentary into a hard-hitting hip-hop narrative, while “Una Mujer” stands as an early Latina feminist statement over a reggae-tinged beat. Now available in a pristine FLAC rip from
In the early ’90s, hip-hop was rapidly fracturing into regional styles and cultural offshoots. While New York and Los Angeles dominated the mainstream, a smaller but fiercely proud scene was brewing in Miami—one where English rhymes met Spanish attitude, and 808 kicks were seasoned with salsa breaks. At the center of that movement stood Lisa M, the “First Lady of Latin Hip-Hop,” and her 1991 debut, Flavor Of The Latin .