Félix Baloy (born November, 12, in 1944 in Mayari, Holguín, Cuba) [1] is a Cuban singer, sonero, and percussionist. [2] [3] [4]
He has a Havana urban accent. [5] He has been a vocalist with many groups, including Chappotin y Sus Estrellas, Revé, and Adalberto Alvarez y su Son, and most recently, the Afro-Cuban All Stars. He was one of the original members of the Afro-Cuban All Stars. [1]
He also sang on the compilation album Café Cubano, produced through Putumayo World Music. [6]
He has at least three solo albums, Baila Mi Son (2000), Un Poquito de Fé (2005), and Un Solo Amor (2008). [7]
One reviewer described him as famous in Cuba but virtually unknown elsewhere, although he had hits in the 1970s. [6] Another reviewer described him as one of the most important soneros of the 1970s and 1980s. [8]
His music has a message of standing up and speaking out for freedom and one's rights, a message which has been hailed as a response to colonialism. [9]
Félix Baloy (born November, 12, in 1944 in Mayari, Holguín, Cuba) [1] is a Cuban singer, sonero, and percussionist. [2] [3] [4]
He has a Havana urban accent. [5] He has been a vocalist with many groups, including Chappotin y Sus Estrellas, Revé, and Adalberto Alvarez y su Son, and most recently, the Afro-Cuban All Stars. He was one of the original members of the Afro-Cuban All Stars. [1]
He also sang on the compilation album Café Cubano, produced through Putumayo World Music. [6]
He has at least three solo albums, Baila Mi Son (2000), Un Poquito de Fé (2005), and Un Solo Amor (2008). [7]
One reviewer described him as famous in Cuba but virtually unknown elsewhere, although he had hits in the 1970s. [6] Another reviewer described him as one of the most important soneros of the 1970s and 1980s. [8]
His music has a message of standing up and speaking out for freedom and one's rights, a message which has been hailed as a response to colonialism. [9]