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2023

New Jersey Directory 2023

Anais Lounge
52 Garden Street Passaic, NJ 07055

Dubai Nightclub
2514 Federal St Camden, NJ 08105

 

California Directory / 2023

Noypitz
333 S Alameda St Suite 115 Los Angeles, CA 90013

Globe Theatre Los Angeles
740 S Broadway Los Angeles, CA 90014

The Mayan Restaurant
1038 S Hill St Los Angeles, CA 90015

Los Globos Nightclub
3040 W Sunset Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90026

Vermont Hollywood
1020 N. Vermont Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90029

El Floridita Hollywood
1253 Vine St Los Angeles, CA 90038

Stevens 75 Anniversary
5332 Stevens Pl Commerce, CA 90040

Riviera 31 Lounge Bar
8555 Beverly Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90048

7 Kingdoms Bar & Lounge
11301 W Olympic Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90064

State Social House Restaurant
8782 W Sunset Blvd West Hollywood, CA 90069

Rock It loungue
14239 Hawthorne Blvd Hawthorne, CA 90250

The Victorian restaurant and nightlife
2640 Main St Santa Monica, CA 90405

Alegria Nightclub Long Beach
115 Pine Ave Long Beach, CA 90802

Sagebrush Cantina, CA
23527 Calabasas Rd Calabasas, CA 91302

Latin Nights at V Lounge -Salseros
6101 Reseda Blvd Tarzana, CA 91335

Black and Blue
342 S Thomas St Pomona, CA 91766

The Canyon
5060 E Montclair Plaza Ln Montclair, CA 91763

Carnaval
342 S Thomas St Pomona, CA 91766

The Granada LA
17 S 1st St Alhambra, CA 91801

Sevilla Night Clun - San Diego
353 5th Ave San Diego, CA 92101

Del Rey
3567 Del Rey St San Diego, CA 92109

Cosmos
12409 mariposa rd Victorville, CA 92395

Sevilla Night Club - Costa Mesa
1870 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa, CA 92626

Legacy
4647 Macarthur Blvd Newport Beach, CA 92660

The Grape Ventura Ventura, CA
2733 E. Main Street Ventura, CA 93003

Alberto' s SalsanightClub & Ultra Lounge
736 W Dana St Mountain View, CA 94041

Cascal
400 Castro St Mountain View, CA 94041

Valencia grill
1153 Valencia St San Francisco, CA 94110

Kimbara Ritmo y Sabor
3380 19th Street San Francisco, CA 94110

Roccapulco Supper Club
3140 Mission St, San Francisco, CA 94110

Cigar Bar & Grill
2424 Mariposa St San Francisco, CA 94110

Rockwellsf
3200 Fillmore St. San Francisco, CA 94123

550 Dance Fridays
550 Dance Fridays
550 Barneveld Avenue San Francisco, CA 94124
+1 415-309-1284

Cigar Bar
850 Montgomery St San Francisco, CA 94133

Gaucho
2410 San Ramon Valley Boulevard San Ramon, CA 94583

Retro Junkie Bar
2112 N Main St Walnut Creek, CA 94596

Yoshi's
510 Embarcadero West, Oakland, CA 94607

Zanzi
19 Grand Ave Oakland, CA 94612

Sausalito Seahorse Restaurant
305 Harbor Dr Sausalito, CA 94965

Charley' s
15 N Santa Cruz Avenue Downtown Los Gatos, CA 95030

Vancouver Directory / 2023

Mangos Kitchen Bar
744 Mt Pleasant Rd Toronto, ON, Canada M4S 2N6

Studio Nightclub
919 Granville street Vancouver, BC, Canada V6Z 1L3

Toronto Directory / 2023

 

Dirty Martini
2075 Winston Park Dr Oakville, ON, Canada L6H 6P5

El Rancho
430 College St Toronto, ON, Canada M5T 1T3

LULA LOUNGE
1585 Dundas West Toronto, ON, Canada M6K1T9

Marlowe Restaurant and Bar
155 York Blvd Richmond Hill, ON, Canada L4B 3B4

Sahara Restaurant
1855 Dundas St E, Mississauga ON L4X 1M1

Smokeshow BBQ & Brew
744 Mt Pleasant Rd Toronto, ON, Canada M4S 2N6

Nicky Marrero is an innovator, timbalero and bongo player, living legend of our Afro-Latin and Caribbean music.

Nicolás Marrero Jr. “Nicky Marrero” was born in the Bronx, New York, on June 17, 1950, to a Puerto Rican father and mother (born in San Germán and Corozal, respectively).

He had formal studies in drums during his adolescence, but more could the sounds of Tito Puente and Willie Bobo, his major influences.

Nicky Marrero is an innovator, timbalero and bongo player, living legend of our Afro-Latin and Caribbean music.
Nicky Marrero is an innovator, timbalero and bongo player, living legend of our Afro-Latin and Caribbean music.

He debuted in music with a high school ensemble called Orquesta Caribe.

However, his first recording session was at the age of 15 with the original band of another teenager born in 1950: Willie Colón.

Curiously, at the time of these sessions, three pillars of the Alegre All-Stars, Charlie Palmieri, Louie Ramirez and Kako, were present in the studio, and young Nicky was invited to participate as a timbalero.

In 1968 he was recruited by Eddie Palmieri, who by then, as a consequence of internal problems, gradually disbanded his original orchestra: La Perfecta.

Nicky Marrero joins the orchestra shortly after recording the album “Champagne,” the album “Justicia” (1969), where, still under the powerful voice of Ismael Quintana, Nicky begins to explore his own sound (listen to his solo in the song “My Spiritual Indian”),

The decade of the 70’s opens for him with three important events: the classic album “Vámonos Pa’l Monte”, his participation with Patato in the album “Portrait Of Jennie” by Dizzy Gillespie and the beginning of his career as a percussion teacher, as a member of the faculty of the East Harlem Music School, the school of Johnny Colón, legendary pianist and one-time pioneer of boogaloo.

Ggilberto Santa Rosa y Nicky Marrero
Ggilberto Santa Rosa y Nicky Marrero

At this institution Nicky gives his first lessons to a 13 year old boy named Jimmy Delgado.

In 1972 Nicky is invited to participate in the Afro-American Music Festival. 1975 he joins the troupe of the Wonderful Jew, Larry Harlow, then he is part of the Revelation Orchestra, two years with the Novel Orchestra.

In fact, thanks to his internship with Harlow’s band, Nicky was already part of Fania Records’ staff of musicians, recording as timbalero, bongos player and even drummer (and one of his first assignments for that label as a studio musician was the album “Pa’ Bravo Yo” by Justo Betancourt, produced by Harlow himself in 1972).

In 1973 he was included in the Fania All-Stars, replacing Orestes Vilató.

Marrero received an invitation from Pacheco to make his debut with them at Yankee Stadium in August of that year. Ironically, despite the events that separated Vilató from the stellar orchestra, he remained part of Fania’s studio staff. In fact, Vilató and Marrero crossed paths on countless sessions for various artists on the label between 1973 and 1980, in most cases with Marrero on timbales and Vilató serving as bongos player.

His multiple sessions for Fania (Ismael Miranda, Ismael Quintana, Héctor Lavoe’s first solo album (“La Voz”), Justo Betancourt and others), he also participates in “Sun Of Latin Music,” Eddie Palmieri’s classic par excellence and the first album to win a Grammy in the then debut category of “Best Latin Album.”

Roberto Roena y Nicky Marrero
Roberto Roena y Nicky Marrero

He is also invited to participate in the first of several rock sessions, this one specifically as an all-around percussionist for the group Electric Flag: “The Band Kept Playing”.

He travels with Fania to the African continent, later Jerry Masucci gets a potentially lucrative contract for the Fania All-Stars with Columbia Records, for recording purposes the orchestra is reduced to a sextet: Pacheco, Barretto, Nicky, Roberto Roena, Bobby Valentin and debuting with the orchestra, Papo Lucca.

This is how Nicky, without being a band leader, not only became a star member of the Fania All-Stars, but also an “exclusive artist” of the Fania label. And as such, he appears on several albums that are not necessarily Latin and travels with Fania to Europe (the first of several subsequent visits) and Japan. Together with Harlow, Vilató on bongo, Eddie “Guagua” Rivera on bass, Frankie Rodríguez on congas, Harry Viggiano on guitar and Pablito Rosario on percussion, he recorded an album of downloads for the Japanese market under the curious group name of Belmonte (“Olé”). [This album is very difficult to obtain.

1977 he joins Tipica’73, an orchestra which he joins shortly after the release of the previous album: “Rumba Caliente,” ironically replacing Vilató once again. The album in question, for which Nicky alternated between his timbales set and the drums proper, is “The Two Sides Of Tipica’73,” the band’s most progressive album.

Nicky introduces drum toms to his rhythm kit (the only drum component Nicky overlooks in his regular timpani set is the hi-hats).

Nicky even recorded his first drum solo on the song “Yo Bailo De Todo” on that album. By this time, production at the Fania label and its subsidiaries was exhausting and the salsa boom in New York was in full swing.

Exhausting tours with the Fania All-Stars, he travels with Tipica’73 to Havana, Cuba, the first time in 20 years of economic blockade and open political friction that a New York Latin orchestra performs in the home of son, Nicky’s visit with La Tipica and Orestes Vilató’s own visit the following year, replacing him with the Fania All-Stars, helped to restore the timbal and bongo to the importance they should never have lost in Cuba.

Nicky Marrero Leyenda Fania
Nicky Marrero Leyenda Fania

To this day, Nicky remains healthy and active in music.

Also Read: The legendary singer Guadalupe Victoria Yolí Raymond “La Lupe”

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International Salsa Magazine (ISM) is a monthly publication about Salsa activities around the world, that has been publishing since 2007. It is a world network of volunteers coordinated by ISM Magazine. We are working to strengthen all the events by working together.