Rufo Garrido

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Also known as
  • El músico más alegre de Colombia
  • El saxo endiabla'o[1]
Born
Rufo Manuel Garrido Gamarra

(1896-11-14)14 November 1896
Cartagena, Colombia
Died3 November 1980(1980-11-03) (aged 83)
Cartagena, Colombia
Rufo Garrido
Also known as
  • El músico más alegre de Colombia
  • El saxo endiabla'o[1]
Born
Rufo Manuel Garrido Gamarra

(1896-11-14)14 November 1896
Cartagena, Colombia
Died3 November 1980(1980-11-03) (aged 83)
Cartagena, Colombia
GenresTropical music

Rufo Manuel Garrido Gamarra[a] (1896–1980) was a Colombian saxophonist, songwriter, and bandleader. He led his own orchestra and also played saxophone in groups including Pedro Laza y sus Pelayeros, the Sonora Cordobesa, and the orchestra Ondas del Sinú. Peter Wade described him as a central figure of mid-century Colombian costeño music, alongside Pedro Laza and Clímaco Sarmiento.[2]

Rufo Manuel Garrido Gamarra[3] was born on 14 November 1896 in Cartagena, in the Colombian department of Bolívar.[1] His father was Víctor Manuel Garrido, a baker.[4] As a child Garrido attended a Salesian school, and learned to play ocarina.[3]

Garrido's first job as a musician was in Sincelejo in the orchestra of Charles Butler, a saxophonist from San Andrés.[4] In the 1930s Garrido played in saxophone in several groups in the Colombian Caribbean, including the Sonora Cordobesa and Ondas del Sinú.[3] In 1952 he founded his own orchestra, which he led on saxophone and which included as members:[3]

  • Ladislao "Lalo" Orozco (piano)
  • Manuel Villanueva (trumpet)
  • Sabas Pacheco (trumpet)
  • Rosendo Martínez (euphonium)
  • Nicolás de Ávila (saxophone)
  • Hernando Mendoza (saxophone)
  • Cristóbal "Calilla" García (bass)
  • Clodomiro Montes (percussion)
  • Crescencio Camacho (vocals)
  • Mariana Burgos (vocals)
  • Isidro "El Pibe" Velasco (vocals)
  • Tony Zúñiga (vocals)
  • Eliseo Herrera (vocals)

Garrido also played saxophone with Pedro Laza y sus Pelayeros, the Cartagena orchestra led by Pedro Laza.[1] He wrote around 100 songs in the styles of cumbia and porro, including notably "El Cebú", "El Cariseco", "La Palenquerita", "El Buscapié", "El Mochilero", and "Sin Breque".[3][1]

Garrido's son Abraham is a saxophonist and bandleader and is known professionally as Rufo Garrido Jr.[3] Garrido died on 3 November 1980 in Cartagena.[3]

Notes

References

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