Miguel "Angá" Díaz | |
---|---|
Birth name | Miguel Aurelio Díaz Zayas |
Born |
San Juan y Martínez, Pinar del Río Cuba |
June 15, 1961
Died | August 9, 2006 Barcelona, Spain |
(aged 45)
Genres | Afro-Cuban jazz, songo, son cubano, Cuban rumba, conga, Santería music |
Occupation(s) | Musician |
Instruments | Conga, cajón, güiro, timbales |
Labels | World Circuit |
Associated acts | Irakere, Afro-Cuban All Stars, Buena Vista Social Club, Omar Sosa, Tata Güines |
Miguel "Angá" Díaz (June 15, 1961 - August 9, 2006) was a Cuban percussionist of Yoruba descent. He was a well-known conguero who also played the cajón, güiro and timbales.
Miguel Aurelio Díaz Zayas was born in San Juan y Martínez in the Pinar del Río Province in Cuba. Angá is a nickname he shared with his father. He began playing early, performing and recording professionally whilst still at college. In 1987 he made his name as a member of the pioneering Latin jazz Grammy award-winning group Irakere and it was with them he perfected his five drum technique.
He played with various Cuban artists including Afro-Cuban All Stars, Buena Vista Social Club, Omar Sosa, Omara Portuondo and Orishas. He recorded and toured with international musicians such as Steve Coleman, Baba Sissoko, Ry Cooder, Pascal Coulon, Malik Mezzadri, Buddy Montgomery and John Patitucci.
In 1994 he recorded Pasaporte with Tata Güines, winning in 1995 the EGREM Album of the Year award. Two years later Angá joined the American trumpeter Roy Hargrove with whom he released the Grammy-winning Cristol Habana. In 2000 he recorded with Rubén González the Grammy-nominated Chanchullo and in that same year he collaborated with Pascal Coulon on the CD Arpa Fusion.