Mario Bauzá
Apr 11, 1911 – Jul 11, 1993
Instrument | trumpet |
Birthplace | Havana, Cuba |
Available Leadsheets

Mario Bauzá is considered today to be one of the most important forces in the Afro-Cuban jazz movement—perhaps even the founding father of Latin jazz. His classical training, deep knowledge of Cuban music and love of jazz combined to make him uniquely able to compose Cuban-jazz integrations in the 1940s.
A prodigious talent, Mario Bauzá was a working clarinetist by the age of 9. In 1926, he traveled to New York to record for RCA-Victor and heard jazz orchestras like those of Duke Ellington for the first time, which greatly impressed him. He played clarinet and oboe with the Havana Philharmonic Orchestra before moving back to New York once he turned 18. In 1932, Bauzá learned the trumpet (in 15 days) for a gig, then went on to play trumpet and musical direct for drummer Chick Webb. (He discovered vocalist Ella Fitzgerald and convinced Webb to hire her.)
Bauzá went on to work with bandleaders Don Redman, Fletcher Henderson, and Cab Calloway. He influenced Calloway in the hiring of trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie. In 1947, he introduced Gillespie to percussionist Chano Pozo, sparking a critical collaboration in jazz history. In 1941, Mario Bauzá founded Machito and his Afro-Cubans with his brother-in-law, vocalist Frank "Machito" Grillo. It was with Machito that Bauzá refined his fusion of jazz and Cuban music. In 1943, he wrote Tanga, considered by many historians to be the first Afro-Cuban jazz composition and perhaps even the first true fusion piece. Bauzá stayed with the band until 1976.
In the 1980s and 1990s, Bauzá led his own Afro-Cuban orchestra and recorded three albums of his arrangements; he also toured extensively in Europe. During this time, his huge contribution to jazz became more widely known. In 1993, Mario Bauzá was featured on the cover of DownBeat magazine, finally receiving the recognition his exceptional career had earned.
List of Composers
- Ronnie Ball
- Rob Bargad
- Bill Barron
- Bruce Barth
- Pamela Baskin-Watson
- Mickey Bass
- Mario Bauzá
- David Berkman
- Peter Bernstein
- Eddie Bert
- Denzil Best
- John Bishop
- Walter Bolden
- Walter Booker
- Ruby Braff
- Adam Brenner
- Bob Brookmeyer
- Harold "Tina" Brooks
- Clifford Brown
- Donald Brown
- Shelley Brown
- Ray Bryant
- Jon Burr
- Kenny Burrell
- Rahn Burton
- Willie Maiden
- Kitty Malone
- Cal Massey
- Ronnie Mathews
- Tina May
- Cecil McBee
- Verena McBee
- Gary McFarland
- Howard McGhee
- Tom McIntosh
- Jim McNeely
- Charles McPherson
- Fleurine Mehldau
- Sergio Mihanovich
- Doug Miller
- L. Aziza Miller
- Leon Mitchell
- Bill Mobley
- Hank Mobley
- Grachan Moncur III
- J.R. Monterose
- Buddy Montgomery
- Jack Montrose
- Ralph Moore
- Michael Philip Mossman
- George Mraz
- Mark Murphy