Azuquita

Nicknamed "Azuquita" for his mellow, delicate voice, Panamanian singer-songwriter Camilo Azuquita is often credited with helping popularize salsa music in Europe. Born Luis Camilo Argúmedes Berguido on February 18, 1946, in Colón, Panamá, he developed an interest in music during his adolescence and began his career performing bolero and guaguancó. After winning an amateur singing contest held by RPC Radio, he became the lead vocalist for Enrique Lynch's orchestra in Peru, and later collaborated with the likes of Roberto Roena, Ismael Rivera, and Rafael Cortijo. Following a short stint as the lead vocalist of the Sonora Matancera in 1969, Camilo Azuquita formed his own group Azuquita y Su Melao, with whom he recorded and released the classic salsa albums Salsa en Hollywood (1974), Pura Salsa (1975), Llegó y Dijo (1979), Salsa en Vivo (1980), and Salsa International (1983). Apart from his work with the group, he also collaborated with the orchestra La Típica ’73 on the albums The Two Sides of ' Típica '73 (1977) and Salsa Encendida (1978) and appeared on releases by Louie Ramírez, Tito Puente, and Orquesta Felicidad. In the following decades, Camilo Azuquita continued to deliver critically acclaimed albums such as Lo Bailado Nadie Me lo Quita (1999), La Salsa, C´est Pas Compliqué (2000), Cuba Son (2001), and Baila Para Mí (2005), his last studio album. He passed away in his home in Panama City on December 25, 2022, at the age of 76.

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