Sexteto Nacional

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Siboney 03:10 Tools
Mujeres Enamorenme 03:11 Tools
Mama, Se Quema la Maya! 00:00 Tools
Por un Beso de Tu Boca 00:00 Tools
Mujeres Enamórenme 00:00 Tools
Reliquiäs de Amor 00:00 Tools
Lejana Campina 00:00 Tools
Cubaneo 00:00 Tools
Suavecito (Gently) 00:00 Tools
Alma Guajira 00:00 Tools
Incitadora region (Inciting Region) 00:00 Tools
Suavecito 00:00 Tools
Esas No Son Cubanas (Those Women Are Not 00:00 Tools
Cuba: Sutileza Son 00:00 Tools
Lejana Campiña 00:00 Tools
Quejas De La Montaña 00:00 Tools
Mama, Se Quema La Maya (Maya Is Burning) 00:00 Tools
Esas no son cubanas 00:00 Tools
Echale Salsita 00:00 Tools
Miguel, Los Hombres No Lloran 00:00 Tools
El Guanajo Relleno 00:00 Tools
Sutieza 00:00 Tools
Mujeres Enamorenme - Sexteto Nacional 00:00 Tools
Incitadora Región 00:00 Tools
Canta La Vueltabajera 00:00 Tools
Mujeres Enamórenme [Album Version] 00:00 Tools
Viva El Bongó 00:00 Tools
Quejas De La Montana 00:00 Tools
Donde Vas con el Rabo? 00:00 Tools
Ay, Guarina 00:00 Tools
Minaroco 00:00 Tools
Fernanda 00:00 Tools
Rosa Roja 00:00 Tools
Reliquias E Amor 00:00 Tools
The Music Of Cuba 00:00 Tools
For A Kiss Of Your Lips 00:00 Tools
Has Perdido Mi Amor 00:00 Tools
Those Women Are Not Cuban 00:00 Tools
  • 3,545
    plays
  • 980
    listners
  • 3545
    top track count

In 1926, Maria Teresa Vera founded the Sexteto Occidente at the urging of Columbia Records for whom she had worked for in 1914 and who competed with Victor's Sexteto Habanero. The Occidente traveled to NYC to record and appeared at the Apollo Theater. The group's records didn't catch on and they did not continue recording. When they returned from NYC in 1927, Ignacio Piñeiro (1888-1969), who had learned bass in order to play with the Occidente and had composed many of the numbers, created a new group at the bequest of Columbia Records. It was one of the most important in Cuban music history and became known as the Sexteto Nacional. The veteran cantador Alberto Villalon was a founding member of the Nacional as were Juan de la Cruz and Bienvenido Leon, previously singers with the Villalon. The Nacional had the greatest of the early generation of soneros recruited from Sexteto Habanero: Abelardo Barroso (1905-1972). Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.