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Description
This is the story of how Cuban music captivated the world in the 1950s, told through the life of mambo's most famous musician, Pérez Prado.
A riveting tour through rich moments in Cuban, Mexican, and American cultural history, this book captures Prado's colorful life and surprising influence, including his famous hit “Mambo No. 5.” Not only did Prado and his contemporaries ignite an American passion for the thrilling dance music of mambo, but they also played an essential part in early R&B and rock 'n' roll. Their influence can even be seen in much popular music of today, from Shakira and Jennifer Lopez to Karol G and Michael Bublé.
Born in Cuba, Prado landed in Mexico City when music and cinema were soaring, starring in classic films of the Cine de Oro and writing for noir musicals in the 1940s and 1950s. He lived in Los Angeles for more than a decade, creating some of his most notable artistic works that earned him a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. As Cuban music rose, audiences could not resist the startling horns, percussion, and rhythms of his hits.
Prado had his quirks and an extreme attraction to kitsch. He regularly wore jewels, heavy gold chains, and flamboyant suits and drove a Cadillac with tiger stripe upholstery. This book dives into the story and legacy of this larger-than-life figure.
Table of Contents
Prologue
1. Matanzas
2. Heroica Veracruz
3. Danzón and New Orleans
4. Bitterness Street
5. Mambo Wednesdays
6. Cubans in Mexico City
7. Queens of the Tropics
8. A Match on Gasoline
9. Cuban Music in La Epoca de Oro
10. Mambo Goes Wide
11. Banished
12. Mambo And US Music
13. Back in Mexico City
14. After
Sources
Song List
Acknowledgements
Index
Product details
| Published | Jun 11 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Hardback |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 288 |
| ISBN | 9798216368687 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Illustrations | 40 b/w photos |
| Dimensions | 9 x 6 inches |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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A singular artist in Latin music, Pérez Prado married the dissonances of Stravinsky to the rumba of his native Cuba. John Radanovich's book illuminates Prado's world.
Jacob Plasse, composer, producer, and founder of Chulo Records
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The most thorough, informative, and readable account to date of Pérez Prado's life and career. In Radanovich, the King of the Mambo has found the chronicler he deserves.
Gustavo Pérez Firmat, author of The Havana Habit; David Feinson Professor Emeritus of Humanities, Columbia University, USA
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It is finally here: the first comprehensive English-language biography of the King of the Mambo. Congratulations!
Mats Lundahl, Professor Emeritus, Stockholm School of Economics; author of Bebo de Cuba: Bebo Valdés and His World
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Radanovich has brought forth a kaleidoscopic mambo-vision dream that gets at the fascinating, little-known corners of the mid-century Cine De Oro movement in Mexican cinema and its tantalizing rumberas, as well as the worldwide dissemination of the mambo and Prado's signature distillation of the rhythmic drive of that grand movement.
Paul Cebar, singer, songwriter, bandleader, and radio host of Way Back Home
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John Radanovich's sweeping account of Pérez Prado's life, music, and career provides rich context and thorough exploration of the artist's development, his collaborators, competitors, and his contemporaries. Offering a fascinating look at the interrelated Cuban and Spanish Caribbean music scenes across the globe, and the cultural impact of the mambo across eras, this comprehensive book preserves Pérez Prado's memory and music-and the legacy of the mambo era-for future generations.
Benjamin Lapidus, Professor of Music, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, and The Graduate Center, CUNY, USA and author of New York and the International Sound of Latin Music, 1940-1990























