Jimmy Sabater

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Yroco 00:00 Tools
Kool It Here Comes The Fuzz 00:00 Tools
Salchicha Con Huevo 05:34 Tools
La Peleona 03:12 Tools
Salchicha Con Huevos 00:00 Tools
Por Primera Vez 00:00 Tools
Times Are Changin' 00:00 Tools
Que Sabroso 00:00 Tools
Kool It 00:00 Tools
To Be With You 00:00 Tools
Kool It (Here Comes The Fuzz) 00:00 Tools
Sufre Como Yo Sufri 02:57 Tools
Dona Teresa 00:00 Tools
Volare 00:00 Tools
Los Tiempos Cambian 00:00 Tools
To Be With You (Re-Edit) 02:45 Tools
Mind Blowing Decision 00:00 Tools
To Be With You - Re-edit 00:00 Tools
LA FLAUTA 04:25 Tools
El Albanil 03:24 Tools
Mama Guela (Tributo A Tito Rodriguez) 00:00 Tools
Wichita Lineman 00:00 Tools
Cuando Cuando 00:00 Tools
Vida 00:00 Tools
Cara De Payaso (Tributo A Tito Rodriguez) 00:00 Tools
Bomba Carambomba 00:00 Tools
Perfidia 00:00 Tools
Fue en Santiago 00:00 Tools
Cuando Cuando (Tributo A Tito Rodriguez) 00:00 Tools
Malambo 00:00 Tools
Salchichas Con Huevos (Sausages & Eggs) 00:00 Tools
Boozaba Zoo Descarga 00:00 Tools
Desconfianza 00:00 Tools
To Be With You (Disco version) 00:00 Tools
Mambo Diablo (Tributo A Tito Puente) 00:00 Tools
El Numero Seis 00:00 Tools
Para Gozar Belen 00:00 Tools
Cachondeando 00:00 Tools
Ahora Que Te Has I Do 00:00 Tools
De Enero a Enero 00:00 Tools
Druma Kuyi 00:00 Tools
Lalle, Lalle 00:00 Tools
Bailando Con Sabater 00:00 Tools
Babalao 00:00 Tools
A Man Ain't Supposed to Cry 00:00 Tools
La Puerta / To Be With You 00:00 Tools
Pa las Villas 00:00 Tools
A Las Seis (Tributo A Joe Cuba) 00:00 Tools
Con La Punta Del Pié (Tributo A Cortijo Y Ismael Rivera) 00:00 Tools
Pensar 00:00 Tools
Guaguanco En Tropicana 00:00 Tools
Alafia 00:00 Tools
Bomba Calipso Y Plena (Tributo A Cortijo Y Ismael Rivera) 00:00 Tools
Jimmy Sabater - Yroco 00:00 Tools
Pa' Las Villas 00:00 Tools
Los dos 00:00 Tools
La Tumba Soy Yo (feat. Ray Barretto) 00:00 Tools
Caress Me 00:00 Tools
Cachondea 00:00 Tools
Salchichas Con Huevo 00:00 Tools
Bailando Don Sabater 00:00 Tools
el negro bembon 00:00 Tools
Blues For Louie Ramirez 00:00 Tools
Salchicha Con Huevo - Jimmy Sabater 00:00 Tools
Maquina Landera 00:00 Tools
Desperately 00:00 Tools
Sugar - Jimmy Sabater/ocho 00:00 Tools
Alafia (Tributo A Joe Cuba) 00:00 Tools
La Tumba Soy Yo 00:00 Tools
A Las Sies (Tributo A Joe Cuba) 00:00 Tools
Mia 00:00 Tools
Bochinchosa 00:00 Tools
Para Gozar Belén 00:00 Tools
Psicologo Loco 00:00 Tools
Palabras Calladas 00:00 Tools
Descarga Son Boricua 00:00 Tools
My Memories of You 00:00 Tools
Volare (english) 00:00 Tools
Salchichas Con Huevos 00:00 Tools
Buen Borincano 00:00 Tools
To Be With You (Al Kent Edit) 00:00 Tools
Fue El Santiago 00:00 Tools
Mama Guela (feat. Jose Mangual, Jr.) 00:00 Tools
No Me Hagas Sufrir 00:00 Tools
no te olvides de mi 00:00 Tools
Never Let Me Go 00:00 Tools
Now that you've gone 00:00 Tools
Pare Cochero 00:00 Tools
To Be With You (Original Version) 00:00 Tools
Qué sabroso 00:00 Tools
When I'm Alone 00:00 Tools
Boozabazoo Descarga 00:00 Tools
Mi Negrita Me Espera (Tributo A Ismael Rivera) 00:00 Tools
Cuando,cuando 00:00 Tools
Quintessence 00:00 Tools
Funny 00:00 Tools
At The Party 00:00 Tools
The More I See You 00:00 Tools
Lloraras (Tributo A Oscar D' Leon) 00:00 Tools
She - Bobby Marin/ocho 00:00 Tools
pa`las villas 00:00 Tools
I Still Love You 00:00 Tools
Que Boquita Linda 00:00 Tools
Laura 00:00 Tools
Kool It (Retro Roland Riso Boricua Funk Rework) 00:00 Tools
con la punta del pie 00:00 Tools
Kool It (Here Comes The Fuzz) [Selected by DJ Format] 00:00 Tools
Mind Blowing Decision (Selected by DJ Muro) 00:00 Tools
Suger 00:00 Tools
El Negro Bembón (Tributo A Cortijio Y Ismael Rivera) 00:00 Tools
I Dont Wanna Be Lonely Tonight 00:00 Tools
Los Tres Pianos 00:00 Tools
Para Que Gocen Los Pollos 00:00 Tools
Mulato Rumbero 00:00 Tools
Kool it / Jimmy Sabater 00:00 Tools
Que Sera 00:00 Tools
Jimmy Sabater - Salchicha con Huevo 00:00 Tools
Feelin' Blue 00:00 Tools
To Be With You [Re-Edit] 00:00 Tools
Sufre como yo sufrí 00:00 Tools
Pare Cochero (feat. Charlie Palmieri) 00:00 Tools
Gimme Some Love 00:00 Tools
012 CUANDO CUANDO 04:02 Tools
Renovando 00:00 Tools
Doña Teresa 00:00 Tools
cuando, cuando 00:00 Tools
Kool It Here Comes The Fuzz - DJ Format Remix 00:00 Tools
To Be with You (Al Kent Re-edit) 00:00 Tools
Una Vez Mas 00:00 Tools
Kool It Here Comes The Fuzz - Jimmy Sabater 00:00 Tools
El Negro Benbon 00:00 Tools
027 CHARANGA EN NEW YORK 00:00 Tools
Ill Teach You How to Cry 00:00 Tools
SalsaChicha Con Huevo 00:00 Tools
Feeling Blue 00:00 Tools
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Jimmy Sabater (April 11, 1946 - February 8, 2012) was born in Harlem Hospital, New York City. The proud son of Nestor Sabater and Teresa Gonzalez of Ponce, Puerto Rico, Jimmy grew up in East Harlem, the Spanish Quarter of New York City known as “El Barrio”. Like most teenagers in the neighborhood, he played stickball, flew kites, and harmonized the tunes of the popular R&B groups and vocalists of the day such as Nat King Cole. He was inspired by percussionists such as Willie Bobo, Uba Nieto, Papi Pagani, Monchito Muñoz, and Willie Rodriguez. With encouragement from many of these same drummers who were from “El Barrio”, Jimmy practiced playing the Timbales, the standing drum kit made world-famous by the great “Rey del Timbal”, Maestro Tito Puente. It was during a 1951 stickball game between the Devils and the 112th Street Viceroys that Jimmy’s life would turn towards history. A young man named Gilberto Calderon of the Devils met Jimmy, and invited him to a party. The two became fast friends. They had a lot in common. Both wanted to be musicians after being influenced by the music of Machito, Marcelino Guerra, Noro Morales, Puente, and Tito Rodriguez. 1954 saw the Joe Panama Sextet as one of Spanish Harlem’s most popular music groups. When Panama’s Conguero, or conga drummer, left the group, Jimmy recommended his friend Gilberto for the job. Soon after, bandleader Joe Panama fired his sidemen and replaced them with others. The now unemployed musicians which included vocalist Willie Torres and pianist Nick Jimenez formed a group which included bassist Roy Rosa, vibraphonist Tommy Berrios, timbalero Jimmy Sabater, and conguero Gilberto Calderon (who had been selected by the musicians to direct the band.) One evening, the group appeared at La Bamba Club in midtown Manhattan under the name of “The Joe Panama Sextet”. When Panama’s mother threatened to sue Gilberto if he continued using the name, promoter Catalino Rolón recommended that the group change its name to “The Joe Cuba Sextet”. So they did. They played gigs in the clubs of “El Barrio”, as well as upstate New York venues such as The Pines Resort. The popularity of Cuba’s sextet began to rise when José “Cheo” Feliciano joined the group. This occurred when Jose Curbelos’ vocalist Santitos Colon replaced Gilberto Monroig in Tito Puente’s band. Willie Torres then left Joe Cuba’s Sextet, and replaced Santitos in Curbelos’ orchestra. This opened the door for Cheo with Joe Cuba. This worked out perfectly for Cuba. Feliciano was selected to sing songs with Spanish lyrics, while Jimmy was selected to sing songs with English lyrics. From the late 1950’s and into the early 1960’s the Sextet recorded on the Mardi Gras label, constantly increasing their popularity. In 1962, Seeco Records recorded Joe Cuba’s album “Steppin’ Out”. This album would become a “monster hit”, and Jimmy would become part of history, as on the album he sang perhaps the love song of that era, “To Be With You”. “I thought Willie Torres was going to record it since it was his composition”, recalls Jimmy. Nick Jimenez composed the melody, but Cuba’s decision to have Jimmy sing the lyrics thrusted Sabater into almost immediate international recognition. Cuba’s sextet signed with Tico Records in 1964. By showcasing the smooth vocal style of Sabater, the group had achieved tremendous fame, both in the United States and around the world. In 1966, they recorded two blockbuster albums, “We Must Be Doing Something Right”, and “Wanted Dead or Alive”. “…Something Right” scored big because of Jimmy and Nicky’s hit composition “El Pito (‘I’ll Never Go Back to Georgia’)”. “Wanted…” is a landmark recording because it was the first “Boogaloo” style album to sell one million records. This happened largely in part because of another smash composition of Sabater and Jimenez called “Bang Bang”. Throughout the 1970’s and 1980’s, Jimmy also had a flourishing career as a soloist, releasing the classic albums “The Velvet Voice of Jimmy Sabater”, “El Hijo de Teresa”, and “Solo”. In 1977 Jimmy Sabater left the Joe Cuba Sextet. From 1977 to 1981, he was the lead vocalist for Al Levy (“Alfredito). 1980 saw Jimmy record the outstanding album “Gusto” on the Fania Records label. In 1982, Jimmy co-led “El Combo Gigante” with the fantastic Charlie Palmieri until Charlie’s untimely death in 1988. On November 12th, 1997, Jimmy Sabater became the recipient of an award from the City of New York for his contributions to the quality of life in the city, and in appreciation of his work since 1956. He was also the recipient of the “Outstanding Musician of the Year” award from the Comptroller of the City of New York, Mr. Alan G. Hevesi. In 1998, Mr. Sabater became the Lead Vocalist of the Latin Septet “Son Boricua” led by Maestro José Mangual Jr. Their first album, called “Son Boricua”, was the winner of the prestigious ACE Award as best new Latin release of that year. More success would follow Mr. Sabater with "Son Boricua". A second, and third ACE Award was earned by "Son Boricua" for the CD's "Homenaje a Cortijo y Rivera", and "Mo!". He continued to perform until 2011 as the lead singer of Son Boricua, and resided in the Bronx until the time of his passing due to complications from heart disease. In addition to his son, Jimmy Jr., he is survived by a daughter, Terry, nine grandchildren and a goddaughter, Debbie Garay. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.