Artist's albums
Aldemaro Romero y Su Onda Nueva la Onda Maxima
2001 · compilation
La Onda Nueva En Mexico
2001 · album
Onda Nueva
1994 · album
Onda Nueva (Instrumental)
1994 · album
Romero: Suite for Strings: Fuga con Pajarillo
2023 · single
Flores negras
2021 · album
Oriental Rumba
2021 · album
Dinner In Caracas
2018 · album
En el Malibu
2016 · album
Presenta la Onda Nueva
2016 · album
La Onda Brava y Su Nueva Onda
2016 · album
Aldemaro Como de Costumbre
2016 · album
Maracaibo
2016 · album
Aldemaro Romero
2015 · album
Valses Venezolanos
2010 · album
Arriba el Joropo
2010 · album
Cantares de Mi Tierra
2010 · album
Colombia de Gala
2010 · album
Criollisima
2010 · album
Dinner en Caracas
2010 · album
El Garrasi
2010 · album
La Turpialita
2010 · album
Fiesta
2008 · album
Onda Nueva: 16 Éxitos de Aldemaro Romero
2004 · album
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Biography
Pianist and composer Aldemaro Romero is widely cited as the innovator behind his native Venezuela's onda nueva (i.e., "new wave"), which updated the traditional joropo style via rhythms inspired by bossa nova. Born in Valencia on March 12, 1928, Romero began his musical training under the supervision of his father, Rafael, a professional pianist -- by age nine, he was a fixture of Venezuelan radio, and at 13 relocated to Caracas, playing with local orchestras and moonlighting in nightclubs. After touring Cuba in 1949, Romero made his U.S. debut in New York City before returning home to found his own dance orchestra. In 1955 he signed to RCA Victor to record the smash Dinner in Caracas, which proved one of the best-selling albums in the history of the South American charts -- the first in a series of Dinner In... titles, its orchestral reinvention of traditional Venezuelan folk melodies proved an international hit as well as a creative turning point in the history of Latin American jazz. During his RCA tenure, Romero also lent his skills as an arranger and conductor to acts ranging from Dean Martin to Jerry Lee Lewis to Stan Kenton, and in 1974 he teamed with jazz guitar great Charlie Byrd to co-headline the cult favorite The New Wave. In 1969 Romero was awarded the Moscow Cinema Festival's Peace Prize of the Soviet Intellectuals for his score for the motion picture epic Simón Bolivar. A decade later he founded the Caracas Philharmonic Orchestra, additionally serving as its first conductor -- during the course of his career, he also conducted the London Symphony Orchestra, the English Chamber Orchestra, and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. After a lengthy digestive illness, Romero died in Caracas on September 15, 2007. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi