Early Cuban bands
Early Cuban bands played popular music for dances and theatres during the period 1780-1930. During this period Cuban music became creolized, and its European and African origins gradually changed to become genuinely Cuban. Instrumentation and music continually developed during this period. The information listed here is in date order, and comes from whatever records survive to the present day.
Típicas
For about a hundred years, from early in the nineteenth century to about 1920, the main orchestral format for popular music was the típica based on wind instruments, usually about 8-10 members. At the same time, there were also itinerant musicians, duos and trios: for them, see trova.Orquesta Concha de Oro
Founded early in the 19th century by the black violinist and double bass player Claudio Brindis de Salas, it played the dance music of the epoch at the balls of the island's aristocracy: contradanzas, minuets, rigadoons, quadrilles, lancers. It was basically a típica, or wind orchestra, which was sometimes augmented to 100 players for special occasions such as fiestas.Brindis de Salas, a disciple of maestro Ignacio Calvo, was also a composer of creole danzas and the author of an operetta, Congojas matrimoniales. In 1844 his musical career was interrupted by his involvement in the Escalera Conspiracy, for which whites were absolved, but blacks paid dearly. Brindis de Salas was arrested and tortured. He was banished from the island by the Governor, O'Donnell. Returning in 1848, he was imprisoned for two years, and when he eventually was free to think about reorganizing his band, he found out that most of them had been executed.
Apart from the operetta, he is known for a melody dedicated to the General Concha, printed in 1854. His son, Claudio Brindis de Salas Garrido was an even better violinist, of world renown.
Orquesta Flor de Cuba
Founded by clarinetist Juan de Dios Alfonso, who moved to Havana, where he played clarinet in Feliciano Ramos's band La Unión in 1856, and directed La Almendares in 1859. It is not quite clear when he formed La Flor de Cuba, which became one of the most popular in the middle of the 19th century. They played contradanzas, and other dances of the time. The orchestra was a típica, with cornet, trombone, ophicleide, two clarinets, two violins, double bass, kettle drum, and güíro. The ophicleide was a sort of bass bugle with keys, invented in 1817; the t-bone would be a valve trombone.They were playing in the Teatro Villanueva in Havana in 1869 when the Spanish Voluntarios attacked the theatre, killing some ten or so patrons who had been watching a bufo, and applauding its revolutionary sentiments. The context was that the Ten Years' War had started the previous year, when Carlos Manuel de Céspedes had freed his slaves, and declared Cuban independence. Creole sentiments were running high, and the Colonial government and their rich Spanish traders were reacting. Not for the first time, politics and music were closely intertwined, for musicians had been integrated since before 1800, and "from 1800 to 1840, blacks were the clear majority of the professional musicians". Bufo theatres were shut down for some years after this tragic event.
Orquesta Valenzuela
The descendant of La Flor de Cuba, led from 1877 by trombonist Raimundo Valenzuela after the death of Juan de Dios Alfonso. We do not know exactly when the name of the orchestra was changed. When Raimundo died in 1905, his brother Pablo became Director. It was, like Flor de Cuba, the most popular típica of its day.Under cornetist Pablo Valenzuela, the band became one of the earliest to record Cuban music, in 1906 with Edison cylinders, 1909 with Columbia Records and with Victor. The last recordings were in 1919; there were about 120 numbers in all, most of which were danzones. The band dispersed after his death.
Orquesta Faílde
Founded 1871 in Matanzas by Miguel Faílde, the official originator of the danzón. His band was composed mainly of wind instruments, and therefore was a típica. Its initial members were: Miguel Faílde ; Pascual Carreras ; Pancho Morales ; Juan Cantero ; Anselmo 'Frijolín' Casalín ; Eduardo Faílde ; Cándido Faílde ; Eulogio Garrido ; Andrés Segovia ; Isidro Acosta.The usual changes in personnel meant that by 1903 the personnel included Eduardo Betancourt ; Alfredo Hernández ; Magdaleno Rodríguez and Benito 'Chacho' Oliva.
This is the band which played the Alturas de Simpson, the first danzón; it was one of Faílde's compositions. It seems the band made no recordings, and it dispersed in 1921 after the death of its leader.
Orquesta Alemán
Founded 1878 in Santiago de Las Vegas. Leader: José Alemán.Alemán was a tailor's cutter in Santiago de Las Vegas and a composer of dance and religious music. He studied music under Pedro Álvarez, and became a double bass player, also a good violinist and pianist. He played double bass in the orchestra of Havana Cathedral, and in the orchestra of Juan de Dios Alfonso.
Orquesta Alemán was a típica or band based on wind instruments. It included Alejo Carillo ; Pedro Espinosa ; Leobino Zayas ; Julián Allende ; Ramón Alemán ; Elias Fuentes ; Juan Tómas Alemán ; Aniceto Rodrígues ; Quirino Sastre.
On the death of José Alemán in 1924, the orchestra was directed by his brother Ramón, and there were numerous changes of personnel. The band was active until the 1930s.
Orquesta de Perico Rojas
Típica formed in 1884 by the trombonist Pedro Rojas, in Güines. Its members at the start of the 20th century included the following: Perico Rojas ; Patricio Valdés and Andrés Rojas ; Martín Caraballo and Miguel Rojas ; Jesús Urfé ; Ambrosio Marín ; Anacleto Larrondo ; Juan R. Landa ; Pedro Hernández ; Leopoldo Castillo. The band lasted to early in the 20th century.Orquesta típica de Felipe Valdés
All that is known of Felipe Valdés is that he was a cornetist and composer, who was born in Bolondrón, Matanzas, in the second half of the 19th century. He founded his típica in 1899, and it became popular in Havana. Its instrumentation in 1916 was: 3 violins; 2 clarinets; cornet; trombone; double bass; saxophone; güíro and timbales. Probably it had started with an ophicleide, and later substituted the saxophone. They included a piano by 1929.The group recorded more danzones than any other before 1920. They recorded for Edison, Columbia ; Victor. The total number of recordings was 315 numbers. Valdés composed many numbers, including La Africana, Lamentos and Yeyé Olube. Some of these recordings are available on CD: four numbers from 1907, one from 1916 and one from 1929. Díaz Ayala said, "It's incredible that there is no more information about this director who composed and recorded so many danzones."
Orquesta de Enrique Peña
Cornetist Enrique Peña's danzonera was one of the first to record, and that profusely. This was the second band he organized : the line-up was: Peña ; Antonio González ; Féliz González ; José Belén Puig ; José Urfé ; Julián Barreto ; Alfredo Sáenz ; José de los Reyes ; Rufino Cárdenas and unknown.The orchestra started to record in 1908, and became famous for El bombín de Barreto, written by Urfé, which was supposedly the first danzón to incorporate a syncopated third part, influenced by the son. Several members of the band went on to become well-known later on. The group recorded about 150 numbers, some of which are available on CD.
Orquesta de Félix González
This, one of the last típicos to be founded, started in 1915 with a core of members from Enrique Peña's band. The set-up was: González, Dolores Betancourt ; José Belén Puig ; José Urfé ; Miguel Ángel Mendieta and Benito Moya ; Guillermo Maherve ; Demetrio Pacheco and Ulpiano Díaz. Despite its old-fashioned format, the orchestra kept in work for 52 years, until the death of its Director in 1967. Three of its recordings are available on CD, from 1916, 1925 and 1928.Charangas
supplanted the típica as the standard instrumental line-up for the danzón. Initially called charangas francesas, they were 'invented' at the start of the 20th century. The formulation is still going strong, with appropriate adjustments to the instrumentation. The basic idea is to pitch the tone of the orchestra higher and brighter than the típica, by removing the brass, replacing the clarinet with a flute and replacing the kettle drums with a new invention, the pailas criollas, now called timbales. This metal-cased drum, hit with timbales sticks, and not timpani sticks, produces a distinctive effect. The two timbales drums are pitched differently, and may be supplemented with two timbalitos, pitched even higher, and one or two cencerros. Also noteworthy is the use of the sticks on the metal casing to produce a rhythm known as the cascara. From early on these bands also included a piano. The overall effect is to produce a lighter, brighter flavor to the music; who actually originated the idea is not known.Orquesta Torroella
Founded at the end of the 19th century in Havana, this was the first charanga francesa in the capital, and the first to include a piano.Its director was the pianist Antonio 'Papaito' Torroella, and from the start the band included Papaito Torroella ; David Rendón ; Faustino Valdés and Evaristo Romero. Under the title Sexteto Torroella, the group recorded eight numbers on Edison cylinders in 1906.