Bachata’s modern era was ushered in by Blas Durán’s incorporation of the electric guitar into the music in 1987. The group of bachateros who followed in Durán’s footsteps—Luis Vargas, Raulín Rodriguez, Antony Santos, Juan Bautista--all had a role in defining what the music has come to sound like today. There is, however, no argument that the single most influential bachatero in establishing the modern style, as well as the most commercially successful within the Dominican Republic is Antony Santos.
Santos comes from the same region on the northern border with Haiti as Luis Vargas and Raulín Rodriguez, and they all worked with one another at various times. Santos began as the güirero in Luis Vargas’ group when Vargas was beginning to make a name for himself with doble sentido merengues that imitated both Blas Duran and Eladio Romero Santos.
He left Vargas’ group in the wake of personal differences between the two, and recorded his first production, La chupadera, in 1991. The cassette (at that time bachata was not yet available on CDs, which at any rate would have been too expensive for the music’s traditional audience) included a number of doble sentido songs like “La parcela”, “La passola” and “El behuco”. The number that helped define the beginning of a new era in bachata, however, was “Voy pa’lla”, a strictly romantic song which became a huge hit among both traditional bachateros and the public at large. “Voy pa’lla” was one of the first significant “electric” bachatas not based on sexual double entendre, and it reached a wider audience than probably any single song ever recorded in the genre up to that time.
Antony Santos was precisely the right musician in the right place at the right time during bachata’s history. While it was the bachata “Voy pa’lla” that originally made him famous, Santos had as much success with the merengues on his recordings as the bachatas. This heavy emphasis on merengue was instrumental in allowing bachata to reach a larger audience, because many Dominicans, still unwilling to let go of the traditional stigma against bachata, didn’t know how to dance it. Santos’ merengues were accessible to the Dominican public at large, and some of his biggest hits have been merengues.
While modern bachata does not begin with Santos, the innovations which he and his group introduced into the genre have been extremely important in defining its current form. Previously, lead guitarists like Edilio Paredes and Augusto Santos played upward with their fingers in a florid, melodic style; even Jesús Martinez, Blas Duran's pioneering lead guitarist, used his fingers to play although in a simpler fashion. Antony Santos, followed the lead of his mentor Luis Vargas and Eladio Romero Santos in playing the strings downward, with a thumb pick. The resulting style was simpler and more rhythmic, and has given bachata an instantly recognizable sound when compared with other kinds of Latin guitar music. Meanwhile, the bachata which Santos was recording began to reflect, more and more, the influence of his merengues. His bongo player played the instrument with two sticks, rather than with his hands, and many of the breaks had a merengue feel. In addition, the group developed a mambo section in which the güira plays a pattern typical of merengue and the bass plays a pattern derived from the cha-cha-cha section of traditional bolero. In the merengues themselves, the traditional tambora rhythm was replaced by a simplified version of “caballito”, the rhythm made popular by merengue orquestas like Los Hermanos Rosarios.
As the decade of the 1990s went on, Santos was consistently successful with both his bachatas and his merengues, and the rhythmic patterns which his group developed for the different sections of the song came to be the standard for the genre. And while other bachateros came and went, Santos continued to thrive, eclipsing his rival and former mentor, Luis Vargas, among others. So many of Santos’ songs have become classics of modern bachata that a list of them would read like a list of virtually everything he recorded during the 1990s. Some of his most significant songs during this period have been his merengues “El perrito”; “Me voy a morir”: “Dejame entrar”; “La batalla”, and “Quililín quililán”. Among the many landmark bachatas which Santos recorded during the 1990s are “Corazón culpable”, “Quien te engañó”, “Consejo de padre”, “Durmiendo solo” and “Pegame tu vicio”.
In 2001’s El balazo, Santos began to experiment again by incorporating an electric keyboard into his merengues, a subtle innovation which did not significantly alter the music. In the following recording, Juego de amor, he included saxophones and turned the keyboard up in the mix. The new sound did not receive ringing endorsements from bachata’s traditional audience; by this time other bachateros had drastically reduced the number of merengues they were recording as bachata itself grew in popularity by leaps and bounds, so fans of merengue de cuerda had only Santos to depend on. His incorporation of saxophones and piano seem to have hurt the popularity of his most recent recordings, although the bachatas on them, including “La jaula de oro” and “Ay, ay, ay” (recorded live), have been well received
At this point Antony Santos is the elder statesman of bachata. To many young bachateros, unfamiliar with Blas Duran, Santos’ music is where modern bachata begins. The fact that he is still active and successful helps to cement his importance in the minds of today’s bachata audience. While Santos was not in fact responsible for the innovations that lead to bachata’s modernization, for which credit is due to Durán and his lead guitarist, Jesús Martinez, he is unquestionably the most important figure in establishing the norms of the modern style. Santos’ popularity, as well, remains as large as his influence. He continues to record hits, and on visits to New York to perform at Madison Square Gardens.
-- David Wayne
TENGO 6 AñOS DE ESTUDIOS EN MUSICA Y SE LO QUE ES UNA GUITARRA BIEN TOCADA Y UNA VOZ AFINADA. TECNICAS QUE AL PARECER NI TU NI TU IDOLO CONOCEN. VETEME UBICANDO. NO ES LO TALENTOSO QUE ES ANTONY SANTOS ES LO POCO EXIGENTES QUE ES LA GENTE EN ESTOS MOMENTOS CUANDO SE TRATA DE MUSICA. EL MAYIMBE. POR FAVOR! MUSICALMENTE, ESO LO QUE DA ES GRACIA.
ULYSES, TU LO QUES ESTAS CELOSO POR QUE DIOS NO TE DIO TALENTO... TU ESTAS LOCO EL MEJOR DE LA BACHATA SE LLAMA ANTHONY SANTOS, QUE NO SE TE OLVIDE.... MEJOR PONTE A ESTUDIR TU...JAJAJAJAJAJAJAJAJAJ,
ESTE TIPO NO ES MAS QUE UN DESAFINAO. USTEDES ESTAN TODOS SORDOS. VAYANSE A ESTUDIAR MUSICA.
men antoni santo en una de los mejore bachatero del mundo
ANTONY SANTOS TU ERES MIIDOLO LOS MEJOR DIOS A DADO COMO BACHATERO NO SOLO EN PAIS SI NO EN EL MUNDO ENTERO.SACARIA ESTABA ACABANDO LA PRODUCUION DE EL Y TU SOLAMENTE TIRA UN DISCO Y LO APAGA COMO SI FUERA UNA VELA K ESTUVIERA PRENDIDA. ANTONY SI TI TE PASARA POR LA CABEZA DE GRABAR EL DISCO DE TITANIC EN BACHATA AHY ES QUE TU ES QUE A DAR EL PALO DEL SIGLO, ESO ES UN DECIR MIO PERO POR FARFA SI TU LEE ESTE MENSAGE INTENTALO Y MENSIONAME EN ESA BACHATA (ANGEL SOLANO ) EL SEGUIDOR MAS FIEL QUE TU TIENE EN ESTE PAIS DOMICANA.
Does anybody know where Antony Santos is performing this Friday, October 19. I want to go see him.
Alguien sabe donde se presenta Antony Santos este viernes, 19 de octubre? Por favor diganme que quiero ir.
antony santos canta chevere y me gusta como toca la guitarra de espalda
ANTONY MI SUEÑO DE MI VIDA ES QUE TU ME MENCIONES EN TU FIESTAS O EN TUS TEMA Y ANTE DE TU RETIRARTE O DE QUE FALTE UNO DE LOS DOS YO TENGO QUE LOGRAR ESE SUEÑO MI SUEÑO ES SER AMIGO DE UN ARTISTA DE TU CATEGOTIA Y ME GUSTARIA QUE FUERAS TU MI NONBRE ES YANCARLOS TORIBIO DEL CRUCE DE SANTIAGO DE LA CRUZ DAJABON SI ALGUN DIA LEE ESTE MENSAJE MI TEL. ES 829-610-3200
berdaderamente me sinto orgulloso de sel dominicano y tener al mayinbe antony santo es un orgullo para el pais.
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