Dorindo Cárdenas
Dorindo Cárdenas | |
---|---|
Birth name | Daniel Dorindo Cárdenas Gutiérrez |
Also known as | El Poste de Macano Negro[1] |
Born | Aguabuena, Panama | 14 February 1936
Years active | 1950s–2010s |
Spouses |
|
Daniel Dorindo Cárdenas Gutiérrez (born 1936), known as Dorindo Cárdenas, is a Panamanian musician and songwriter. He is particularly known for having founded and led the group Orgullo Santeño, and for his compositions "El Solitario" and "Decimoquinto Festival en Guararé".
Biography
[edit]Cárdenas was born on 14 February 1936 in Aguabuena, Panama.[2] As a child he learned violin from Clímaco Batista Díaz and Francisco "Chico Purio" Ramírez.[2]
As a young man Cárdenas moved to Chiriquí with a group of friends calling themselves Paraíso Istmeño.[1] There he started learning accordion and founded a musical group called the Águilas Istmeñas (Spanish for "isthmian eagles"), whose name changed in July 1957 to Orgullo Santeño (Spanish for "Santeño pride").[1][3] Orgullo Santeño's first single "Santiago de Los Anastacios"/"Pueblo Nuevo" was recorded in 1958.[2]
Rogelio Córdoba was famous in Panama at the time Orgullo Santeño was formed, and was performing on the accordion accompanied by singer Eneida Cedeño . Cedeño came to sing with Orgullo Santeño, and she went on to wed Cárdenas and sang with him until the late 1990s.[1]
Cárdenas wrote over 200 songs,[1] and often toured in Panama and Colombia.[4] He was still performing in 2014 but has since retired, and Orgullo Santeño is led by his son Adonis Cárdenas.[1][3] In 2025 a street in Cárdenas' hometown Aguabuena was named after him.[5]
Personal life
[edit]Cárdenas was married to Eneida Cedeño, and is currently married to María Rosa Vergara, with whom he has two children.[1]
Musical style and compositions
[edit]In 1988 Cárdenas wrote "El Solitario", which has been performed by Colombian Alfredo Gutiérrez as a vallenato, by El Gran Combo de Puerto Rico as a salsa, and by Panamanians Samy and Sandra Sandoval and Spaniard Enrique Bunbury.[1]
Cárdenas' instrumental composition "Decimoquinto Festival en Guararé" was given lyrics by Alfredo Gutiérrez and became a hit when recorded by Los Corraleros de Majagual as "Festival en Guararé".[6] The titular festival is the Festival de la Mejorana , which has taken place annually in Guararé since 1949.[6]
Cárdenas has written over 200 songs, and other notable compositions of his include "Al Galope de mi Caballo" and "Olvidemos el Pasado".[1]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i "Dorindo: el acordeonista que ya no está triste ni solitario" [Dorindo: the accordionist who is no longer sad or lonely], La Estrella de Panamá (in Spanish), 23 February 2014, retrieved 22 May 2025
- ^ a b c Leslie R. George (1999). "Cárdenas, Dorindo [Daniel Gutiérrez]". In Emilio Casares Rodicio (ed.). Diccionario de la Música Española e Hispanoamericana (in Spanish). Vol. 3: Canción – Corell. Sociedad General de Autores y Editores. p. 174. ISBN 84-8048-306-7.
- ^ a b Emily Torres Muñoz (26 July 2024), "Ayer y hoy: 67 años celebra el conjunto de Dorindo Cárdenas" [Yesterday and today: Dorindo Cárdenas' group celebrates 67 years], El Siglo (in Spanish), retrieved 22 May 2025
- ^ Manuel Vega Loo (2 March 2025), "El acordeonista Dorindo Cárdenas está hospitalizado en Chitré" [Accordionist Dorindo Cárdenas is hospitalised in Chitre], La Estrella de Panamá (in Spanish), retrieved 22 May 2025
- ^ Esther Ortega S. (17 February 2025), "Carretera en la provincia de Los Santos llevará el nombre del músico Daniel Dorindo Cárdenas" [Road in Los Santos province to be named after musician Daniel Dorindo Cárdenas], La Estrella de Panamá (in Spanish), retrieved 22 May 2025
- ^ a b Gustavo Gómez Martínez (21 September 2019), "¿En qué edición va el famoso Festival de Guararé? Esta es la historia" [What edition is the famous Guararé Festival at? This is the story], RCN Radio (in Spanish), retrieved 22 May 2025
External links
[edit]- Dorindo Cárdenas discography at Discogs