- Mi Linda Habanera · 2005
- Grandes Éxitos de Adalberto Alvarez (Greatest Hits from the 90s) · 1973
- Tumi Cuba Classics Volume 4: Son The Bing Sound · 1995
- Salsacional · 2001
- Jugando Con Candela · 1999
- Sabor a Cuba · 2005
- Mi Linda Habanera · 2001
- Jugando Con Candela · 1999
- Grandes Éxitos de Adalberto Alvarez (Greatest Hits from the 90s) · 1996
- Jugando Con Candela · 1999
- Roots of Buena Vista · 1984
- Afro Cuban Social Club Presents: la Casa Salsa (Cuba's Greatest Salsa) · 2015
- Tumi Cuba Classics Volume 4: Son The Bing Sound · 1995
Singles & EPs
- 2010
Compilations
About Adalberto Alvarez
Adalberto Alvarez was a leading force in the revival of son, the Cuban dance music that reached its peak in popularity in the '50s. The former leader of Adalberto Alvarez & Conjunto Son 14, Alvarez continued to pay homage to, as well as expand, the son tradition with Adalberto Alvarez y Su Son, the band that he formed in 1984. While his music signaled a return to traditional sounds, Alvarez successfully incorporated more modern musical influences. The New York Times once wrote, "(Adalberto Alvarez y Su Son) is one of Cuba's great bands, one that has had an enormous influence on salsa; it's modern and unstoppable and it doesn't sound like the Havana-based dance music called timba. Instead, it sounds a bit more traditional, closer to New York and Puerto Rican salsa, smooth and elegant for a moment, until the volcano loses the top." Alvarez studied musical directing and composition at the National Arts School in his hometown of Camaguey. Following his graduation, he was asked to form an orchestra in Santiago de Cuba. That group became Adalberto Alvarez & Conjunto Son 14, one of the pioneering ensembles of modern son. In 1984, Alvarez formed a new band, Adalberto Alvarez y Su Son, in Santiago de Las Vegas, a suburb of Havana. Although they used the traditional son instruments, including the Cuban tres, a guitar with triple sets of double strings, and plucked bass, the group's sound was enhanced by electronic keyboards, timbales, trombones, and other brass instruments. Jorge Luis Rojas (aka Rojitas), the band's original vocalist, left to join Jesús Alemañy's band, ¡Cubanismo!, and was replaced by Aramis Galindo. While many of Adalberto Alvarez y Su Son's songs reflected the usual son themes of everyday life, several tunes deal with Santeria, the religion in which Alvarez was a babalao, or priest. Adalberto Alvarez died on September 1, 2021 due to complication from the COVID-19 virus; he was 72 years old. ~ Craig Harris
- FROM
- Havana, Cuba
- BORN
- November 22, 1948
- GENRE
- Latin