Artist: Cachao

In tandem with multi-instrumentalist brother Orestes, bassist Israel "Cachao" López introduced to Cuban music the African rhythms that transformed the island's traditional danzón into what is now known as the mambo--he also pioneered the descarga, the late-night jam sessions that revolutionized the sound and scope of Afro-Cuban pop and jazz. Born in Havana on September 14, 1918, just over a decade after Orestes, Cachao was the product of a sprawling, multi-generational musical family--at age eight, he joined a local children's septet that featured singer Roberto Faz, himself a significant figure in Cuban musical history as well, and within a year teamed with another future legend, pianist Ignacio Villa (a.k.a. Bola de Nieve), to play his neighborhood movie theater in support of silent film presentations. As a teen Cachao played contrabass with the Orquesta Filarmónica de La Habana, supporting guest conductors including Igor Stravinsky, Herbert von Karajan and Heitor Villa-Lobos before joining Orestes in the Orquesta Arcaño y sus Maravillas in 1937.
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