Trio Matamoros lyrics
Artist · 70 916 listeners per month
Artist's albums
Son De La Loma
2023 · album
En San Juan de Puerto Rico (Deluxe Edition)
2023 · album
Cuba
2023 · album
Corazon Herido - Trio Matamoros Boleros
2022 · album
Puro Amor
2021 · album
Son Cubano para Gozar
2021 · album
Alma De Roca
2021 · album
El Son Cubano del Trío Matamoros (Remastered)
2020 · album
Retrato
2019 · album
Tres Grandes Tríos de Cuba
2019 · album
Extincion
2018 · album
Legendario (Remastered)
2018 · EP
La China en la rumba
2018 · album
Las maracas de Cuba
2018 · album
Legendario (Remastered)
2018 · album
Grandes Trios de Cuba
2015 · album
Trío Matamoros y Aquellas Canciones
2015 · album
Legends of the Cuban Music, Vol. 5
2015 · album
Dos Grandes Trios Cubanos
2015 · album
Nostalgia de Cuba
2015 · album
Legends of Cuban Music
2014 · album
Canciones Escogidas Vol. 1 (Remastered)
2013 · album
Canciones Escogidas Vol. 2
2013 · album
El último disco (Remastered)
2013 · album
Grandes Éxitos
2013 · compilation
Lágrimas Negras (Remastered)
2013 · album
Similar artists
Sierra Maestra
Artist
Los Guaracheros De Oriente
Artist
Eliades Ochoa
Artist
Ñico Saquito
Artist
La India De Oriente
Artist
Beny Moré
Artist
Conjunto Casino
Artist
Los Jubilados
Artist
Arsenio Rodríguez
Artist
Orquesta Aragón
Artist
Vieja Trova Santiaguera
Artist
Los Compadres
Artist
Orquesta Riverside
Artist
Orquesta América
Artist
Abelardo Barroso
Artist
Celina González
Artist
Guillermo Portabales
Artist
Joseito Fernández
Artist
Barbarito Diez
Artist
Biography
One of the most popular and influential Cuban groups of the '20s and '30s, Trio Matamoros was formed in 1925 by Miguel Matamoros, along with percussionist Siro Rodriguez and guitar player Rafael Cueto. The band performed from 1925 until it disbanded in 1969, hitting several creative peaks along the way. From the beginning, the trio made an impact with its own unique sound, the bolero-son. Their music was rich with harmonies, but also featured the strong rhythm of the son, which was blended with the romanticism of the bolero. The band also expanded and contracted several times during its tenure, at times performing as a trio, septet, orchestra, and conjunto. In the '40s, Matamoros' voice began to falter and he recruited a number of singers to fill in for him. From 1945-1947, Beny Moré sang with the band, at first just filling in Matamoros' part in the trio's harmonies, then taking on a much more focal role. Over the years, the band incorporated elements of swing, mambo, and rhumba into their recordings, and benefited from the mambo craze in the United States in the '50s, eventually recording in a large-band format that better suited the dance fever that was sweeping America. ~ Stacia Proefrock, Rovi