Sophy Hernández
Sophy Hernández, better known as Sophy, Sophy de Puerto Rico and La Sophy, is a Puerto Rican singer and show host. A member of the Puerto Rican new wave movement, Hernandez scored several hits during the 1970s and 1980s, including "Que Sabe Nadie", "De Mujer a Mujer" and a Spanish cover of the Debarge song "Rhythm of the Night".
Her television show, "Sophy, al Ritmo de la Noche", debuted in 2015 on Telemicro Internacional and was seen across Latin America and on parts of Africa.
Early life
She was born in the northwestern Puerto Rican coastal city of Aguadilla. As a little girl, she and her family moved to the nearby city of San Sebastian.Career
As a teenager, Sophy qualified to be shown singing on canal 4's television show "Show de las 12"'s "La Nueva Ola" section, which was produced by Tommy Muniz, gaining Hernández initial celebrity in her country.Around 1967, Hernández moved to the United States' city of New York, New York as she was hired by Tito Puente, the legendary Puerto Rican musician, to participate in his orchestra as a singer. Hernández participated on Puente's television show, "Tito Puente y su Mundo Latino", which was transmitted weekly from channel 47 in Newark, New Jersey. Puente thereafter produced Sophy's first album, titling it "Tito Puente Presenta, con Orgullo....Sophy!", which was a Tico Productions record and yielded, in 1970, the first major hit for Sophy, "La Ultima Palabra".
In Puerto Rico at the time, she was represented by Gaspar Pumarejo of WAPA-TV, channel 4.
Sophy's second album was also released in 1970 and produced by Tito Puente and Tico Records. It was titled "Te Reto". In 1972, she was signed by Velvet Records, a major musical label of the time.
1973 was a major year for Hernández; she first released an album which yielded three major Puerto Rican radio hits, "Te Apuesto", "Será, Será" and Christmas celebration theme "Los Reyes Magos". Her second album that year was named "Yo Soy Mujer....y no Soy Una Santa", which had major hits such as "Cancion Para Una Esposa Triste", which became a number one hit on Puerto Rican radio, and, according to reporter Javier Santiago, made her the "undisputed Caribbean music album market queen".
Following a series of other hits, such as "Usted ya me Olvido", "Despertaras Llorando" and "Me Muero Por Estar Contigo", Hernández took up residence at the Caribe Hilton Hotel in Puerto Rico's capital city of San Juan, and had a series of concerts at Teatro Tapia, also in San Juan. Sophy also performed at San Juan's Centro de Bellas Artes and the San Juan Hotel during this era.
Next, Hernández embarked on an international tour which saw her visit countries such as Mexico, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Venezuela and the United States. In the Dominican Republic, she and Fausto Rey sang in front of 30,000 fans at Santo Domingo's Estadio Olimpico Stadium.
In Panama, Sophy headlined concerts at Teatro Nacional and in the United States, she performed at the Madison Square Garden. 1980 turned out to be another huge year for Sophy: she released an album which included one of her best internationally known songs, the major hit "Que Sabe Nadie?" and received an award by Billboard en Espanol. She was also named Grand marshal of the Puerto Rican Day's parade in New York City.
Sophy diversified her repertoire during the 1980s, with a salsa song named "De Mujer a Mujer", neofolklore songs "Una Estrella Pura" and "Palabras del Ausente", and a Willie Colón produced album named "Sophy en Nueva York". Sophy then recorded a merengue version of Debarge's major pop-rock hit, "Rhythm of the Night". "El Ritmo de la Noche", Sophy's Spanish version of "Rhythm of the Night", was adapted into that language by the famous singer and composer, fellow Puerto Rican Lou Briel.
Continuing her successful career, Sophy enjoyed success in the Dominican Republic with songs like "Se ve y se va". "Marinero", "10 Noviembres" and a collaboration with Johnny Ventura, the legendary Dominican singer, the latter song named "No lo Dejes Caer".
In 1987, Sophy was signed by CBS Records. She tried her hand at the Portuguese market and did some remixes of her merengue songs but did not last long with that record company: by the early 1990s, she left Sony, the owners of CBS Records, and joined Forum Records, an independent record company, with which she recorded "Esta Soy Yo", an album that was not very successful. Hernández then tried to compete with several other Puerto Rican and Dominican women merengue singers such as Olga Tanon, releasing a new album named "Un Lado Aparte" for Combo Records, which was another indie record company. Her next album, "Tributo a Grandes Voces", was dedicated to some of the most famous Latin singers in history, such as Virginia López, Agustin Lara, Lucho Gatica, Lino Borges, Bobby Capo, Javier Solis, Tona la Negra, Felipe Lara, Pedro Infante, Jose Feliciano, Roberto Yaňez, Los Angeles Negros and Gilberto Monroig.
Through her career, Hernández has also been interviewed on television several times, including on a Veronica Castro show in Mexico, a Mirtha Legrand and an Andrés Percivale one in Argentina, Sabado Gigante and the Cristina Saralegui ones at Univision in the United States and more.