Sonora Matancera

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Sonora Matancera is a long-time band. Led by 90-year-old guitarist and vocalist Don Regelio Martinez, La Sonora Matancera has been called, by the Guinness Book of World Records, "the group with the longest duration."

Formed by Valentin Cane, bassist Pablo "Babu" Vasquez, vocalist Eugene Perez, timbales player Manuel "Jimagua" Sanchez, trumpet player Ismael Goberna, and guitarists Domingo Medina, Jose Manuel Valera, Julio Gobin, and Juan Llopiz Baptist, the band has gone through many personnel changes in more than seven decades. Vocalists in the group have included Daniel Santos, Bienvenido Granda, Nelson Pinedo, Alberto Beltran, Bobby Capo, Carlos Argentino, Myrta Silva, and its greatest alumna, Celia Cruz. Bongo and batá drums as well as accordion and hammond organ featured prominently among the instruments used.


Original director, Valentin Cane, led the band until poor health forced him to retire at the end of the 1930s. Initially known as Septeto Soprano, the group adapted its name to La Sonora Matancera in 1932. Leaving Cuba, at the advent of the revolution of the 1950s and 1960s, the group settled in New York, where they continued to share their love of salsa with enthusiastic audiences.

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