José Carbajal | |
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![]() José Carbajal on February 2010
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Background information | |
Also known as | El Sabalero |
Born | December 8, 1943 |
Origin | Uruguay |
Died | October 21, 2010 | (aged 66)
Genres | Popular music |
Occupation(s) | Singer |
Instruments | Guitar |
Associated acts | Alfredo Zitarrosa, Los Olimareños, Daniel Viglietti, Pablo Estramín, Larbanois - Carrero, Los Zucará |
José María Carbajal Pruzzo (Juan Lacaze, Colonia, 8 December 1943 – Villa Argentina, Canelones, 21 October 2010), known as El Sabalero was an Uruguayan singer, composer and guitarist.
He completed his primary education at the Don Bosco Industrial School in Puerto Sauce and attended high school for a single year at the public lyceum. He dropped out after starting to work in a textile factory. But he completed his studies later, at a public nocturnal lyceum.
In 1967 he migrated to Montevideo and started to act in folk clubs, singing his own compositions. The same year, he released his first recording, for the Orfeo label, which featured fellow guitarist Roberto Cabrera.
This record made up of four chamarritas went virtually unnoticed, and two years later he recorded his first LP album, Canto Popular.
With a foreword by poet Idea Vilariño, and instrumental support by Yamandú Palacios and Roberto Cabrera, this record was a remarkable success in Uruguay and Latin America. The record features some of his most famous songs, such as Chiquillada, La sencillita y A mi gente.
In the 1970s he became famous in the whole of Latin America with his song Chiquillada, also performed by Leonardo Favio and Jorge Cafrune.
Between 1970 and 1973 he lived in Buenos Aires, leaving in exile at the onset of the Uruguayan dictatorship due to his communist ideals. He travelled to México, France and Spain, eventually settling in the Netherlands with his Dutch wife Anke van Haastrecht.