La Charanga Habanera: Timba's Showmen
David Calzado's band turned 1990s Havana dance floors into spectacle
Pioneers1 min read2 citations
If NG La Banda invented timba, La Charanga Habanera turned it into a spectacle — the flashiest, most provocative dance band of 1990s Cuba.[1]
David Calzado's project
La Charanga Habanera emerged in the late 1980s as a project led by the violinist and bandleader David Calzado, and by 1992 it was playing a seminal role in defining the new timba sound.[1] Its first great timba hit, "Me sube la fiebre" (from the 1992 album Fiebre de amor), brought an extraordinary popularity the band would never relinquish — and featured a young Manolín "El Médico de la Salsa" among its collaborators.[1]
Hey You Loca and the golden years
After signing with the label Magic Music in 1994, the group toured internationally and released a run of landmark albums — "Hey You Loca!" and Pa' que se entere La Habana — that count among the most important in modern Cuban music.[1] Their blend of tight horn arrangements, street-smart lyrics, and synchronized stage choreography made them idols of Havana's youth and the band everyone imitated.[2]
Why it matters
For a generation of Cubans, La Charanga Habanera was timba — glamorous, daring, and irresistibly danceable.[2] Alongside Los Van Van and NG La Banda, David Calzado's orchestra stands among the essential architects of the genre, and its 1990s recordings remain a high-water mark for Cuban popular dance music.[1]
References
- 1.The First Great Charanga Habanera: 1993-1997 — Timba.com, 2026
- 2.The Charanga Habanera — Havana Music School, 2026