All Genres
    World/Reggae
    Caribbean
    Salsa
    Latin Soul

Joe Cuba Sextette

  • Overview
  • Albums
  • Tracks
  • Similar Artists
  • Listeners
Joe Cuba Sextette Radio
Play
Options

Play All Top Tracks

More
  • Play
    1
    Options
    3:20
    Quinto Sabroso
    Quinto Sabroso
  • Play
    2
    Options
    3:01
    I Need You
    I Need You
  • Play
    3
    Options
    2:07
    Oye Bien
    Oye Bien
  • Play
    4
    Options
    2:30
    Trip to Mamboland
    Trip to Mamboland

Latest Albums

More
thumbnail
Play
Options

Joe Cuba Sextette

Jul 2011
thumbnail
Play
Options

Breakin' Out (West Side Original Remastered)

Oct 2010

Biography

Joe Cuba may be the "Father of Latin Boogaloo" -- the furious 1960s style that combined Cuban rhythms with soul music -- but he actually started out playing mambo. And despite his moniker, his parents had come from Puerto Rico a couple years before he was born Gilberto Calderon, in Spanish Harlem in 1931. Following a brief foster-home stint on Staten Island, he grew up above his step-father's barrio candy store, took up congas after a stickball injury, and by the mid '50s had his own band, which was eventually named the Joe Cuba Sextet. By the '60s, he was mixing English lyrics into Spanish ones; in 1964, increasingly playing in front of young black crowds while sharing bills with Motown acts, he introduced a funky call-and-response chant called "Bang Bang," partly an homage to soul food: "Corn bread, hog maw, and chitterlings." Subsequent hits loaded up on hey-heys, coochie-coochies, beep-beeps, jokey dialogue, mock black-power chants, doo-wop harmonies, hipster slang, and spoken parts about keeping cool with fire hydrants in the summer. It was a wild party on wax. Salsa subdued Cuba's sound somewhat in the '70s, but only relatively. He passed away in 2009.

Top Listeners

More
Denitha Polk
Chad McDonald
Denitha Polk and Chad McDonald have been listening to Joe Cuba Sextette lately

Similar Artists

More
  • Bobby Valentin
  • Johnny Colon
  • Pete Rodriguez
  • Ray Barretto
  • Willie Colon
  • Willie Rosario