Rumba Rumbero CHANO POZO
Dizzy Gillespie & Chano Pozo - Manteca
The Legacy Of Chano Pozo Fragmento
Chano Pozo & Dizzy Gillespie: Manteca.wmv
Buscando a Chano Pozo I
Luciano Chano Pozo - Nagüe (Rumba afro)
Luciano Chano Pozo - Cubana be - Cubana bop (Cubop)
Chico & Rita - Tribute to Chano Pozo
Ya no se puede rumbear (Chano Pozo)
Testimonio sobre la muerte de Chano Pozo
TIN TIN DEO - CHANO POZO by JUANCAMADRID.
CHANO POZO Y ARSENIO RODRIGUEZ - SERENDE - MACHITO ORCHESTRA
The legacy of Chano Pozo -completo-
Poncho Sanchez & Terence Blanchard - Chano Pozo Medley
Rumba Rumbero CHANO POZO
Dizzy Gillespie & Chano Pozo - Manteca
The Legacy Of Chano Pozo Fragmento
Chano Pozo & Dizzy Gillespie: Manteca.wmv
Buscando a Chano Pozo I
Luciano Chano Pozo - Nagüe (Rumba afro)
Luciano Chano Pozo - Cubana be - Cubana bop (Cubop)
Chico & Rita - Tribute to Chano Pozo
Ya no se puede rumbear (Chano Pozo)
Testimonio sobre la muerte de Chano Pozo
TIN TIN DEO - CHANO POZO by JUANCAMADRID.
CHANO POZO Y ARSENIO RODRIGUEZ - SERENDE - MACHITO ORCHESTRA
The legacy of Chano Pozo -completo-
Poncho Sanchez & Terence Blanchard - Chano Pozo Medley
Chucho Valdés & Irakere - A Chano Pozo
AMPARAME - Chano Pozo
Benny More - Rumberos de Ayer (HOMENAJE A CHANO POZO)
Chano Pozo Y Su Conjunto Azul - Ave Maria Morena 1946
Chano Pozo Y Su Conjunto Azul - El Pin Pin 1946
Chano Pozo Y Su Conjunto Con El Mago Del Tres 1947
Homenaje a Chano Pozo
Dizzy Gillespie - "Afro" - Full album
DonSalserisimo T,Puente C,Cruz Murio Chano Pozo
Chano Pozo
Jayne Cortez "I See Chano Pozo"
Chano Pozo - Corta Historia - Mini Documental (by LucasLp) 1/3
Chano Pozo Y Miguelito Valdez Con La Orquesta De Mil Diez .1947
Chano Pozo y Arsenio Rodriguez - Porque tu sufres
Chano Pozo: Historia de la Musica Afro-Cubana
Manteca - Dizzy Gillespie
Andy Montañez Murio Chano Pozo
Homenaje a Chano Pozo
Buscando A Chano Pozo
Dizzy Gillespie and Manteca
Chico and Rita Exclusive Clip: Poor Chano Pozo
DIZZY GILLESPIE feat. CHANO POZO - Round about midnight
Documental acerca de CHANO POZO ( segunda parte )
Chano Pozo - "El Cajon"
Paquito D'Rivera y Giovanni Hidalgo CUBOP Tributo a Chano Pozo Afro Cuban Jazz Roots Miami 2013
Latin Music USA || CAP 1: PUENTES (3/9)
Bobby Carcassés Blues para Chano Pozo, Calgary Canada 2006
Los Papines - Interview with Oni Acosta Llerena
Dizzy Gillespie - Cubana Bop
Nostalgia Cubana - Bobby Carcasses - Blue para Chano
chano.mp4
Machito & Charlie Parker - Un Poquito De Tu Amor
CUBOP- CELEBRATING DIZ AND CHANO
Nostalgia Cubana - Dizzy Gillespie en Cuba
Ray Barretto - Song For Chano - Cover
Chick Corea - Soul Sauce (Guachi Guaro) Live
The Pace Report: "Francisco's Cuban Groove" The Francisco Mela Interview
Meet Candido
Machito and his Afro-Cubans - Blem Blem Blem
Eddie 'Lockjaw' Davis - Afro-Jaws- full album
Bo Bun Brass Band - Live au "Hot Brass" - 3 mai 1996 - HD
David Sanborn - Jazz a Vienne 2009
Chico & Rita
Candido Camero Guerra - Manos De Fuego
Homenaje Manuel Pozo 2
Horace Silver Trio & Art Blakey + Sabu [1953] | Full Album
Salsa En La Calle Presents Frank Grillo Machito Y Mario Bauza
Salsa En La Calle NY Style Presents Tribute to Lil Ray Romero
Bo Bun Brass Band - Live au Festival "Jazz sous les Pommiers" à Coutances - 13-05-1996 [HD]
Salsa En La Calle Tribute to Ray Barretto Postumo PT 1
CHANO Y SUS TROPICALES EL CARPERITO 2013
MICHEL Y SU GRUPO LATIN JAZZ, en Concierto en la Sala Beethoven de Cali. 1a. parte
Salsa En La Calle Tribute to Ray Barretto Postumo PT 2
MAMABANEGRA EN ZAPEROCO
Bridges: Musica Afro-Cubana Origen de la Salsa e Influencia en el Jazz (Latin Music USA)
Salsa En La Calle Tribute to Ray Barretto Postumo PT 3
Salsa En La Calle Tribute to Ray Barretto Postumo PT 4
Chano Pozo (January 7, 1915 – December 2, 1948) was a percussionist, singer, dancer and composer who played a major role in the founding of Latin jazz. Though he died young of unnatural causes, no discussion of Latin jazz is complete without mentioning his name and no discussion of the trumpet giant Dizzy Gillespie, the godfather of Latin jazz in the U.S., can begin without the name of Pozo, who was the first in a long line of Latin percussionists in Dizzy's various bands. Dizzy's dozens of Latin-flavored compositions, including the hit song "Manteca" and "Tin Tin Deo" (both co-written by Pozo), "Fiesta Mojo" and others - have Afro-Cuban drumming derived from the ritual rhythms of West Africa as their rhythmic backbones. Despite a short stint in Dizzy's band abbreviated by Chano's early death, Pozo's influence could be felt in Dizzy's playing and compositions for decades, which Dizzy acknowledged without hesitation.
Luciano "Chano" Pozo Gonzales was born in Havana to Cecelio Gonzales and Carnación Pozo. Chano's family (three sisters and a brother, as well as his older half brother, Felix Chapottin who became one of the great Cuban soneros) struggled with poverty throughout his youth. His mother Carnación, to whom his father was married, died when Chano was eleven, and Cecelio took his family to live with his long-time mistress, Natalia, who was Felix's mother.
John Birks "Dizzy" Gillespie ( /ɡɨˈlɛspi/; October 21, 1917 – January 6, 1993) was an American jazz trumpeter, bandleader, composer and, occasionally, singer.
Allmusic's Scott Yanow wrote, "Dizzy Gillespie's contributions to jazz were huge. One of the greatest jazz trumpeters of all time (some would say the best), Gillespie was such a complex player that his contemporaries ended up copying Miles Davis and Fats Navarro instead, and it was not until Jon Faddis's emergence in the 1970s that Dizzy's style was successfully recreated . . . Arguably Gillespie is remembered, by both critics and fans alike, as one of the greatest jazz trumpeters of all time."
Gillespie was a trumpet virtuoso and improviser, building on the virtuoso style of Roy Eldridge but adding layers of harmonic complexity previously unknown in jazz. His beret and horn-rimmed spectacles, his scat singing, his bent horn, pouched cheeks and his light-hearted personality were essential in popularizing bebop.
In the 1940s Gillespie, together with Charlie Parker, became a major figure in the development of bebop and modern jazz. He taught and influenced many other musicians, including trumpeters Miles Davis, Fats Navarro, Clifford Brown, Arturo Sandoval, Lee Morgan, Jon Faddis and Chuck Mangione.
Poncho Sanchez (born October 30, 1951), a Mexican-American, is a conguero (conga player), Latin jazz band leader, and salsa singer. In 2000, Sanchez and his ensemble won the Grammy Award for Best Latin Jazz Album for their work on the Concord Picante album Latin Soul. Sanchez has performed with artists Cal Tjader, Mongo Santamaría, Hugh Masekela, Clare Fischer and Tower of Power, among others.
The youngest of eleven children, Poncho Sanchez was born in Laredo, Texas. He was reared in Norwalk, California. Growing up, Sanchez was exposed to and influenced by two very different styles of music: Afro-Cuban music (mambo, son, cha-cha, rumba, guaracha, salsa) by greats such as Tito Puente, and bebop jazz, including the works of Charlie Parker. Originally a guitarist, he discovered his talent for singing during an audition for an R&B band "The Halos" that rehearsed across the street from where he lived with his neighborhood friend Ralph Vasquez then becoming the lead vocalist of the group. Sanchez would later go on to teach himself the flute, drums, and timbales before finally deciding to pursue conga-playing in high school.
Terence Oliver Blanchard (born March 13, 1962) is an American jazz trumpeter, bandleader, composer, arranger, and film score composer. Since he emerged on the scene in 1980 with the Lionel Hampton Orchestra and then shortly thereafter with Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers, Blanchard has been a leading artist in jazz. He was an integral figure in the 1980s jazz resurgence having recorded several award-winning albums and having performed with the jazz elite.
He is known as a straight-ahead artist in the hard bop tradition but has recently utilized an African-fusion style of playing that makes him unique from other trumpeters on the performance circuit. However, it is as a film composer that Blanchard reaches his widest audience. His trumpet can be heard on nearly fifty film scores; more than forty bear his unmistakable compositional style. Since 2000, Blanchard has served as Artistic Director at the Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz and as of August 2011 he was named the Artistic Director of the Henry Mancini Institute at the University of Miami Frost School of Music. He lives in the Garden District of New Orleans with his wife and four children.
Chucho Valdés (born Jesús Dionisio Valdés in Quivicán, Cuba, October 9, 1941) is a Cuban pianist, bandleader, composer and arranger. In 1972 he founded the group Irakere, one of Cuba's best-known Latin jazz bands. Together with pianist Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Valdés is revered as one of Cuba's greatest jazz pianists. His father is the famed Cuban pianist and former director of Havana's famous "Tropicana" night club band Bebo Valdés.
Chucho has won four Grammy awards: in 1978 for the album Live at Newport by Irakere; in 1998 for his contribution to the CD Havana by his band Crisol (formed in 1997), with two songs Mr. Bruce and Mambo para Roy written by Chucho; in 2003 for his album Live at the Village Vanguard; and in 2011 for his album Chucho's Steps.
On 16 October 2006, Chucho Valdés was nominated Goodwill Ambassador of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO).
In 2008 Sony released an album of Chucho playing with his father Bebo Valdés.[1]
Chucho's son, Chuchito, is also a jazz pianist.