Original released on LP Columbia CS 9329
(US, 1966)
Percy Faith frequently dabbled in world music and had a great enthusiasm for Latin and exotic rhythms, which he explored on albums such as "The Music of Brazil!" and "Jungle Drums". "Viva! The Music of Mexico" is his musical evocation of Mexico and, like many of his albums, straddles the wide line between moody and boisterous. Stomping passages with percussion and brass segue into movements of sweet violins and vice versa. The humorous arrangement of "La Cucaracha" suggests what Spike Jones might have sounded like as a mood music maestro, and Faith's treatment of "Mexican Hat Dance" could have been scored for Disney. There is nothing "authentic" about "Viva! The Music of Mexico" - Faith mines the music and touristy image of Mexico for inspiration and comes up with an album of imaginative, at times vaguely ethnic, arrangements that provide listeners with a virtual tour of the idealized Mexico of Hollywood, picture postcards, and Mexican restaurants. (Greg Adams in AllMusic)