Barbarito Torres

Cuban musician Barbarito Torres played the laúd with many of Cuban’s top folk groups before joining Buena Vista Social Club for their hit 1997 album.

Synopsis

Born in 1956, Barbarito Torres grew up immersed in the guarijo, a form of Cuban country music. After a stint in the army, he worked as a session musician, playing the laúd, a type of lute with 12 strings, with many of Cuba's top performers. He formed the band Piquete Cubano, and participated in the best selling Buena Vista Social Club album and The Afro-Cuban All Stars project.

Profile

Musician. While well-versed in many different styles, Torres has strong ties to guajiro, a form of Cuban peasant or country music. He even uses a traditional instrument?the lad, which is a type of lute with 12 strings. Torres joined the group Serenata Yumunina in 1970, but he left a few years later to serve in the Cuban army. In the army, he played jazz with its jazz orchestra and was a member of the marching band.

Torres later settled in Havana and worked with many of Cuban's top performers as a session musician. In the 1990s he was very busy with two different groups. He worked Celina Gonzalez and formed his own band called Piquete Cubano. He also participated in two other projects?the Afro-Cuban All Stars and the Buena Vista Social Club. Both were ensembles of Cuban musicians, but each with a different focus. The Afro-Cuban All Stars performed Latin dance music while the Buena Vista Social Club wanted to record traditional Cuban music. Both of these projects received strong reviews, but the phenomenal success of the 1997 album, Buena Vista Social Club, put him?and Cuban music in general?in the international spotlight. The record sold more than 1.5 million copies and led to an international tour.

Since Buena Vista Social Club, Torres has made several solo albums, including Havana Cafe in 1999 and a self-titled work in 2003.

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