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India may have exhibited a range of musical abilities over the course of her long and winding career, from freestyle and house to Latin pop and reggaeton, but she'll be defined forever by her run of chart-topping New York salsa hits for the RMM label in the mid- to late '90s, when she was crowned the Princess of Salsa by none other than Celia Cruz. India began her recording career in the late '80s, just as the heyday of freestyle was fading away. She was inseparable from producer "Little" Louie Vega during this period, and together they recorded some seminal music, especially in the mold of house music. In particular, her recordings with Vega's Masters at Work project ("I Can't Get No Sleep," "When You Touch Me," "To Be in Love") are classic. On the other hand, India's solo career went big-time in 1994 with the release of Dicen Que Soy, her debut for RMM, the premier New York salsa label of the 1990s. This album and its follow-up, Sobre el Fuego (1997), were monumental successes that ensured the salsera's ubiquity on tropical radio for several years. At the end of the decade, India receded from the limelight, recording much more sparingly than she had during the '90s. She still racked up hits and retained a feverish fan following, make no mistake, but not on the same level nor at the same pace. Furthermore, she broadened her style to incorporate forms of tropical music other than salsa.
Born Linda Viera Caballero on March 9, 1970, in Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico, India grew up in a section of the South Bronx known as La Candela. Her parents moved there shortly after her birth, moving in with her grandmother, a world-wise, cigar-smoking woman who was a key influence in India's life. India, who was nicknamed such because of her fine facial features, began singing as a young girl and even took opera classes briefly. She attended grade school in the Bronx, and that's where she met Louie Vega, someone else who would become a key figure in her life, both as her producer as well as her husband. Vega, the nephew of salsa icon Héctor Lavoe, introduced her to the city's burgeoning hip-hop and freestyle scenes, and though only a teenager, she ended up joining the freestyle trio TKA. Produced by the Latin Rascals, TKA ended up recording some seminal freestyle for Tommy Boy, and they're perhaps best known for the membership of Louis "Kayel" Sharpe (aka K7 of "Come Baby Come" fame). India's relations with TKA remain sketchy, but this much is known: she performed live with the group at shows in New York and Miami; she is pictured -- front and center, dressed in red -- with the trio on the cover of the Come Get My Love 12" EP (1986); and her debut single, "Dancing on the Fire," was planned to be included on Scars of Love (1987), the group's debut album, on which she allegedly sang some uncredited background vocals.
In any event, India embarked on a solo career. She quickly aligned herself with producer John "Jellybean" Benitez, who was quite famous at the time thanks to his work with Madonna, among many others. India signed to Benitez's vanity label at Warner Bros., Jellybean, and debuted with a maxi-single, Dancing on the Fire (1988). Produced by Benitez, the title track appears there in five different mixes by Vega, who was now billing himself as "Little" Louie Vega. Next came a second maxi-single, Right from the Start (1989), this one produced by Mantronik, remixed by David Morales, and released by a different division of Warner, Reprise Records. A couple months later, India's debut full-length, Breaking Night (1990), followed, and with it came a couple further singles, "The Lover Who Rocks You (All Night)" and "You Should Be Loving Me." Out of print for years, Breaking Night is a curious album -- a snapshot in time, capturing the moment when freestyle was flickering out, giving way to the style of house music that would become synonymous with Masters at Work. Benitez and Vega split the bulk of the production, and Jocelyn Brown can be heard singing background vocals. Curious or not, Breaking Night didn't sell well; a few of the maxi-singles charted, but not the album itself. And so India's time with Warner Bros. came to an end just as it was starting.
Now it was Vega's turn to assume the spotlight, and so India assisted him with his solo debut full-length, When the Night Is Over (1991), co-writing half the songs. Released by Atlantic and likewise out of print for years, When the Night Is Over is another curiosity, for in addition to its demonstration of Vega's burgeoning talent as a house producer, the album features future salsa superstar (and J-Lo hubby) Marc Anthony as lead vocalist. This team-up of India, Vega, and Anthony resulted in one bona fide classic, "Ride on the Rhythm"; however, as with Breaking Night, not much came of When the Night Is Over in terms of mass-market commerce, and the Atlantic deal fell through in the wake of its release. India and Vega -- married as of 1989 -- stuck together nevertheless, and another opportunity presented itself soon enough, this time with Latin jazz pianist Eddie Palmieri. Under his tutelage, India went about recording a straightforward salsa album, Llegó la India Via Eddie Palmieri (1992), with Vega co-producing and mixing it alongside the Latin jazz legend. Released by a small independent label, Soho Sounds, in partnership with Sony Discos, which handled the manufacturing, Llegó la India Via Eddie Palmieri created quite a buzz amid the New York salsa scene, ultimately reaching the Top Five of the Tropical/Salsa album chart.
Born Linda Viera Caballero on March 9, 1970, in Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico, India grew up in a section of the South Bronx known as La Candela. Her parents moved there shortly after her birth, moving in with her grandmother, a world-wise, cigar-smoking woman who was a key influence in India's life. India, who was nicknamed such because of her fine facial features, began singing as a young girl and even took opera classes briefly. She attended grade school in the Bronx, and that's where she met Louie Vega, someone else who would become a key figure in her life, both as her producer as well as her husband. Vega, the nephew of salsa icon Héctor Lavoe, introduced her to the city's burgeoning hip-hop and freestyle scenes, and though only a teenager, she ended up joining the freestyle trio TKA. Produced by the Latin Rascals, TKA ended up recording some seminal freestyle for Tommy Boy, and they're perhaps best known for the membership of Louis "Kayel" Sharpe (aka K7 of "Come Baby Come" fame). India's relations with TKA remain sketchy, but this much is known: she performed live with the group at shows in New York and Miami; she is pictured -- front and center, dressed in red -- with the trio on the cover of the Come Get My Love 12" EP (1986); and her debut single, "Dancing on the Fire," was planned to be included on Scars of Love (1987), the group's debut album, on which she allegedly sang some uncredited background vocals.
In any event, India embarked on a solo career. She quickly aligned herself with producer John "Jellybean" Benitez, who was quite famous at the time thanks to his work with Madonna, among many others. India signed to Benitez's vanity label at Warner Bros., Jellybean, and debuted with a maxi-single, Dancing on the Fire (1988). Produced by Benitez, the title track appears there in five different mixes by Vega, who was now billing himself as "Little" Louie Vega. Next came a second maxi-single, Right from the Start (1989), this one produced by Mantronik, remixed by David Morales, and released by a different division of Warner, Reprise Records. A couple months later, India's debut full-length, Breaking Night (1990), followed, and with it came a couple further singles, "The Lover Who Rocks You (All Night)" and "You Should Be Loving Me." Out of print for years, Breaking Night is a curious album -- a snapshot in time, capturing the moment when freestyle was flickering out, giving way to the style of house music that would become synonymous with Masters at Work. Benitez and Vega split the bulk of the production, and Jocelyn Brown can be heard singing background vocals. Curious or not, Breaking Night didn't sell well; a few of the maxi-singles charted, but not the album itself. And so India's time with Warner Bros. came to an end just as it was starting.
Now it was Vega's turn to assume the spotlight, and so India assisted him with his solo debut full-length, When the Night Is Over (1991), co-writing half the songs. Released by Atlantic and likewise out of print for years, When the Night Is Over is another curiosity, for in addition to its demonstration of Vega's burgeoning talent as a house producer, the album features future salsa superstar (and J-Lo hubby) Marc Anthony as lead vocalist. This team-up of India, Vega, and Anthony resulted in one bona fide classic, "Ride on the Rhythm"; however, as with Breaking Night, not much came of When the Night Is Over in terms of mass-market commerce, and the Atlantic deal fell through in the wake of its release. India and Vega -- married as of 1989 -- stuck together nevertheless, and another opportunity presented itself soon enough, this time with Latin jazz pianist Eddie Palmieri. Under his tutelage, India went about recording a straightforward salsa album, Llegó la India Via Eddie Palmieri (1992), with Vega co-producing and mixing it alongside the Latin jazz legend. Released by a small independent label, Soho Sounds, in partnership with Sony Discos, which handled the manufacturing, Llegó la India Via Eddie Palmieri created quite a buzz amid the New York salsa scene, ultimately reaching the Top Five of the Tropical/Salsa album chart.