Artist's albums
Cha Cha Nº 1 (Remastered)
2022 · EP
Mamá Inés (Remastered)
2022 · EP
Sabor Cubano
2022 · album
Mambo Riffs
2021 · album
Estoy en el Cielo (Remastered)
2020 · album
Cactus (Remastered)
2020 · album
Cha Cha Cha in Tropicana (Remastered)
2020 · album
Afimayé (Remastered)
2020 · album
Piano Cubano (Remastered)
2019 · album
El Cajón de Bebo
2019 · album
El Solar de Bebo
2019 · album
Estoy en el cielo
2019 · album
Birthday Mambo
2018 · album
Esta es la charanga
2018 · album
Insesible corazón (1955 - 1958)
2018 · album
Amigos (Remastered)
2015 · album
Tonight
2015 · single
All That Ass (feat. Spade)
2014 · single
Perlas Cubanas: The Latin Sound Of Bebo Valdés
2014 · album
Beautiful Music
2014 · album
Bebo
2014 · album
Blanco y Negro (En Vivo)
2014 · album
Juntos para Siempre
2014 · album
Live At The Village Vanguard (En Directo)
2014 · compilation
Suite Cubana
2014 · album
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Biography
Born in October 1918 in Quivican, Cuba, Bebo Valdés played piano from an early age and was very active as a performer, composer, arranger, and musical director at various Havana nightclubs throughout the ‘40s and into the 50s. During these years, he was also playing and arranging for numerous recording dates. Very highly regarded within the Cuban musical world, Valdés worked with many artists, including Mario Bauza and Ernesto Lecuona. With the growth of Afro-Cuban music worldwide, Valdés toured Europe and the U.S. In 1960, unhappy with the new political power in Cuba, Valdés left his homeland, taking up residence in Stockholm, Sweden in 1963. He continued to compose and play but, despite the fact that his son Chucho Valdés had become an internationally known jazz musician, it wasn’t until the late ‘90s that he was brought back into a recording studio. Encouraged by Paquito D’Rivera, whose father was a friend of Valdés and who was also an associate of Chucho from their time together in Irakere, a session was arranged and took place in Germany. Valdés composed most of the music (much of it written in haste the day before) and played on the session; his performance was remarkably good considering the decades-long layoff from full-time performing. Also on the session with Valdés and D’Rivera were Juan-Pablo Torres (trombone), Diego Urcola (trumpet), Amadito Valdés (percussion), and Carlos Emilio Morales (guitar; ex-Irakere). That album marked a resurgence for Valdés. His follow-up album was a trio set with Israel "Cachao" Lopez and Carlos "Patato" Valdés, although D’Rivera guested on some tracks. Valdés continued to record into the 2010s. He can be seen in the documentary film, Calle 54 (2000), in which he appears alongside numerous Latin jazz exponents, including his son Chucho, Gato Barbieri, Eliane Elias, Chico O’Farrill, and Tito Puente. The coincidental rise of interest in traditional Cuban music, prompted in part by the Buena Vista Social Club albums, played a role in Valdés’ twilight career success. Nevertheless, it was clear that as a composer he played an important part in the music of Latin America in general, and Afro-Cuban jazz in particular. Bebo Valdés died of pneumonia on 22 March 2013 in Stockholm at the age of 94. ~ Rovi Staff, Rovi