Artist's albums
Mi Diario Musical
1996 · album
Espérame En El Cielo
1995 · album
Despierte Borincano
1995 · album
Despierte Borincano
1988 · album
Pasión Bolero
2021 · album
Piel Canela (Remastered)
2020 · album
Quizás, quizás, quizás (Remastered)
2020 · album
Cuadrángulo de amor (Remastered)
2020 · album
Espérame en el Cielo (Remastered)
2020 · album
Puchunga (Remastered)
2020 · album
Aquellos Éxitos de: Bobby Capó
2019 · album
21 Éxitos: Bobby Capó
2017 · album
Bobby Capo la Voz de Oro
2015 · album
Regresa (Encore)
2015 · album
Mentirosa Conmigo
2015 · single
Como un Milagro
2015 · album
Bobby Capo
2014 · album
Yo Canto para Ti
2014 · album
Golden Hits
2010 · compilation
Bobby Capó Con La Sonora Matancera
2010 · album
Bobby Interpreta A Bobby
2010 · album
Época De Oro
2010 · album
More Than A Singer - An Idol
2009 · album
Bobby Capó
2003 · album
Antología Vol. 1
2002 · album
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Biography
Although Bobby Capo is best-known as a Latin vocalist, he was also a noted composer and TV director. Born Félix Manuel Rodríguez Capó on January 1, 1922, in Puerto Rico, Capo later relocated to New York, becoming a musical idol throughout Latin America and Cuba by the 1940s. Although a member of the renowned Xavier Cugat & His Orchestra, Capo enjoyed his greatest success and notoriety as a solo artist, scoring hits with such compositions as "Piel Canela," "El Negro Bembón," "El Bardo," "Luna de Miel en Puerto Rico," "Sin Fe," "Triángulo," and "María Luisa," as well as the ballads "Llorando me Dormí," "Sale el Sol," and "Jacqueline," the latter tune dedicated to former U.S. first lady Jacqueline Kennedy. During the '70s, Capo gave up his musical career as he worked in the Puerto Rico Department of Labor's Division of Migration in New York. Capo passed away on December 18, 1989, less than two weeks shy of what would have been his 67th birthday. ~ Greg Prato, Rovi