Artist's albums
Sree Narayana Gurudevan
1999 · album
Sonidos del Ayer
1998 · album
Olvidar
1972 · single
El Mundo Que Inventamos
1972 · album
Sabu … Romantico e Inolvidable
1994 · album
Gurudevan, Vol. 1
1993 · album
Tangos Inmortales
1992 · album
Coleccion de Exitos
1991 · album
He Tratado de Olvidarte
1972 · single
Sus Grandes Éxitos
1982 · compilation
Quizas Si Quizas No
1981 · single
Quizas Si Quizas No
1981 · album
Album De Oro
1976 · album
Pequeña y Fragil
1976 · single
Dil Ke Darpan Mein
2019 · single
Naadaga Gaanangal, Vol. 17
2018 · album
Makarapulari
2017 · album
Mashhurath
2015 · album
Grandes Exitos
2013 · compilation
Mon Amour
1974 · album
Como Calienta El Sol
1973 · single
Volverá El Amor
1973 · single
Gopika
2007 · album
Navidad
2007 · album
Mon Amour, Mi Bien, Ma Femme
1973 · single
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Biography
Renowned percussionist Sabu was born July 14, 1930, in the Spanish Harlem section of New York City. At a young age, Sabu discovered his fondness for drums and percussion by banging on cans in a street band, before playing in mambo and jazz bands at the age of 11. The young percussionist's big break came in 1948 when he joined Dizzy Gillespie's last big band, and Benny Goodman's outfit a year later. Sabu was also a member of the original Joe Loco Trio, a group that many point to as recording the very first mambo recording in the U.S., and also performed on Broadway alongside the like of Xavier Cugat, Tony Bennett, and Sammy Davis Jr. During the mid-'50s, Sabu recorded with another renowned percussionist, Art Blakey, as the duo specialized in both African and Latin rhythms, before forming his own quintet in 1957 and issuing the albums Palo Congo, Safari, and Sorcery. But by the end of the decade, Sabu had developed an addiction to heroin, which eventually proved detrimental to his career -- at one point he turned his back completely on music and ran a strip club in Baltimore. But his musical exile didn't last for long, however, as the '60s saw Sabu join Louie Ramirez for his Jazz Espagnole release, as well as a Sammy Davis Jr. film in Puerto Rico, before setting up a permanent residence in Sweden and marrying. Sabu continued to record and perform throughout the '70s as he worked with the Radio Jazz Group of Stockholm, in addition to numerous records by other Scandinavian and European artists, formed a new group, New Burnt Sugar, and published a book of conga exercises. On January 13, 1979, Sabu died from a gastric ulcer. ~ Greg Prato, Rovi