Artist's albums
H20
2000 · album
Agua De Cuba
1999 · album
Hitting Hard
1999 · album
Cantos a los Orishas
2006 · album
Ochimini
2004 · album
Cubacan
2002 · album
Similar artists
Spanish Harlem Orchestra
Artist
Los Muñequitos De Matanzas
Artist
Cachao
Artist
Charlie Palmieri
Artist
Noro Morales
Artist
Arsenio Rodríguez
Artist
Mongo Santamaria
Artist
Irakere
Artist
Machito
Artist
Mario Bauzá
Artist
Humberto Ramirez
Artist
Giovanni Hidalgo
Artist
Cuba L.A.
Artist
Jimmy Bosch
Artist
¡Cubanismo!
Artist
Hilton Ruiz
Artist
Poncho Sanchez
Artist
Biography
Drummer/percussionist Francisco Aguabella emigrated to New York City from his native Matanzas, Cuba -- where African music was a tradition -- in 1957. He followed a long line of Cuban drummers who made their mark in America: Chano Pozo, Patato Valdez, Candido, and Mongo Santamaria. Aguabella's music fuses traditional African and Latin rhythms with smooth jazz/soul for an electrifying sound. His proficiency on the bata (talking drums of Yoruba origin) made him a wanted man. He first worked with Dizzy Gillespie, then Peggy Lee, Tito Puente, Eddie Palmieri, Weather Report, Cal Tjader, Frank Sinatra, Louie Bellson, Walfredo de los Reyes, Nancy Wilson, Lalo Schifrin, Machito, and Carlos Santana. He was an original member of Malo, which included Jorge Santana; Malo had three LP releases and crisscrossed the States before disbanding. The legendary drummer participated in movie soundtracks and television scores. Producer Les Blank chronicled Aguabella's career in the documentary Sworn to the Drum. He also received a National Heritage Award from the National Endowment of the Arts, and served as a visiting professor in U.C.L.A.'s Department of Ethnomusicology, where he taught a basic and an advanced course in Afro-Cuban music. He also performed along the West Coast with his group, Francisco Aguabella's Latin Jazz Ensemble. Francisco Aguabella died in Los Angeles on May 7, 2010; he had been battling cancer, and was 84 years old. ~ Andrew Hamilton, Rovi