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Issac Delgado

A Cuban vocalist of the timba generation and the Caribbean salsa circuit

Pioneers4 min read4 citations

Limited sources — this is a concise, best-effort entry that may be expanded as more material becomes available.

As lead vocalist of NG La Banda, Issac Delgado was a central voice in the emergence of timba — the Cuban genre that fused son-based salsa architecture with North American funk and R&B and Afro-Cuban folkloric intensity to produce one of the island's most rhythmically aggressive popular styles.[1] Within NG La Banda's lineup, founded by flautist José Luis Cortés in April 1988, Delgado distinguished himself not only as a frontman but as a composer and extended improviser capable of threading melodic invention through the dense rhythmic arrangements that the group's brass section and percussion engine demanded.[1] His departure to form his own band in 1991 carried timba's stylistic DNA into a solo career that eventually crossed the Florida Straits into the New York salsa circuit, giving him a dual foothold — timba pioneer and Caribbean salsa performer — that few Cuban artists of his generation matched.[1]

Born Isaac Felipe Delgado-Ramírez on 11 April 1962 in Marianao, a western municipality of Havana, Delgado grew up in a household shaped by performance: his father was a tailor, but his mother worked as an actress, dancer and singer at the Teatro Musical de La Habana, and that ambient exposure preceded his formal musical education.[1] Reference catalogues describe him in brief as a musician and salsa performer, a classification accurate as far as it goes but insufficient for the timba dimension of his career.[2]

At ten, Delgado enrolled at the Amadeo Roldán Conservatory to study the cello; by twelve, the instrument had lost him and he redirected his energies to sport, eventually completing a degree in physical education.[1] His return to music came at eighteen, when the pianist Gonzalo Rubalcaba recruited him for the group Proyecto — a contact that proved decisive. Delgado subsequently undertook formal vocal training under Mariana de Gonish and enrolled at the Ignacio Cervantes school for professional musicians.[1]

His professional career began in 1983 with the Orquesta de Pacho Alonso, a seasoned popular orchestra with which he toured internationally and made his first commercial recording; he later served as vocalist for the band Galaxia from 1987.[1] The pivotal appointment arrived in 1988, when he joined NG La Banda as lead vocalist at the precise moment the group was crystallising the timba style — an ensemble whose founding lineup included figures such as Giraldo Piloto on drums and whose brass section became known as los metales del terror.[1] Over three albums with NG La Banda, Delgado consolidated a reputation as an improviser and compositional voice central to the genre's early identity.[1]

His 1991 solo debut, Dando La Hora, was produced under Rubalcaba's artistic direction and earned an EGREM prize the following year; the subsequent Con Ganas added further EGREM recognition.[1] A recurring feature of these solo bands was Delgado's preference for sophisticated jazz pianists, to whom he accorded considerable creative freedom — a practice that kept a jazz-inflected harmonic richness in tension with timba's percussive directness.[1]

By the mid-1990s Delgado was navigating both sides of the Cuban-American musical divide, recording with New York salsa players and Cuban timba instrumentalists in the same period.[1] A performance at a salsa festival in Madison Square Garden, sharing the stage with Celia Cruz and José Alberto 'El Canario', signalled his arrival in the prestige tier of the Caribbean salsa circuit; the album Otra Ideal was recorded in New York in the same period.[1] Observers have noted that this later output gravitates toward the polished salsa sound of the commercial market, though timba textures remain audible in the arrangements.[1]

Delgado's standing in the recorded literature reflects both dimensions of his output. The 1997 Latin Real Book includes 'Son de Cuba a Puerto Rico' and 'Dime tú que lo sabes' among its contemporary salsa transcriptions, situating him within the canonical salsa repertoire.[3] Philip Sweeney's survey of Cuban music documents him among the key artists of the post-revolutionary decades, while scholarly treatments of timba consistently count him among the influential figures who rose alongside José Luis Cortés at the genre's founding moment.[4]

References

  1. 1.Issac DelgadoWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia, Early life and family
  2. 2.Issac DelgadoWikidata contributors, Wikidata, Description
  3. 3.The Latin real book : the best contemporary & classic salsa, Brazilian music, Latin jazz1997, Contents, Contemporary salsa
  4. 4.The rough guide to Cuban musicSweeney, Philip, 2001, Artists cited; After the revolution / The 1990s

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APA

Bailar Editorial Team. (2026). Issac Delgado. Bailar Biblioteca. Retrieved July 8, 2026, from https://getbailar.com/biblioteca/encyclopedia/timba/pioneers/issac-delgado

MLA

Bailar Editorial Team. “Issac Delgado.” Bailar Biblioteca, 2026, getbailar.com/biblioteca/encyclopedia/timba/pioneers/issac-delgado. Accessed 8 July 2026.

Chicago

Bailar Editorial Team. “Issac Delgado.” Bailar Biblioteca. Accessed July 8, 2026. https://getbailar.com/biblioteca/encyclopedia/timba/pioneers/issac-delgado.

BibTeX

@misc{bailar-timba-issac-delgado, author = {{Bailar Editorial Team}}, title = {{Issac Delgado}}, year = {2026}, howpublished = {Bailar Biblioteca}, url = {https://getbailar.com/biblioteca/encyclopedia/timba/pioneers/issac-delgado}, note = {Accessed: 2026-07-08} }

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