ALLEN HINDS 4tet ft. JIMMY HASLIP, MICHELE PAPADIA & GERGO BORLAI (USA)

ALLEN HINDS 4tet ft. JIMMY HASLIP, MICHELE PAPADIA & GERGO BORLAI | Groove Fusion (USA)

Allen Hinds 4tet

ft. Jimmy Haslip, Michele Papadia & Gergo Borlai

Groove Fusion (jazz‑blues‑rock) | USA

AVAILABILITY FOR EUROPE

2026 | August 19th to 30th

Line-up

Allen Hinds | Guitar
Natalie Cole, Roberta Flack, Randy Crawford, James Ingram, Bobby Caldwell, BeBe & CeCe Winans, The Crusaders, Hiroshima, Boney James, Eric Marienthal

Jimmy Haslip | Bass
Allan Holdsworth, Pat Metheny, Bonnie Raitt, Rod Stewart, Donald Fagen, Al Jarreau, Bruce Hornsby, Jeff Lorber, Robben Ford, Bobby McFerrin

Gergő Borlai | Drums
Al Di Meola, Tony MacAlpine, Nathan East, Tom Scott, Vernon Reid, Terry Bozzio, Bob Mintzer, Scott Henderson, Gary Willis, Hadrien Feraud

Michele Papadia | Keys
Ana Popovic, Joe Bonamassa, Noemi, Fabrizio Bosso, Gianluca Petrella, Patty Pravo

Style

A blues-rooted, guitar-led fusion set where hooks matter as much as solos: Allen Hinds’ vocal phrasing rides a pocket built by Jimmy Haslip’s melodic, harmony-aware bass lines and Gergő Borlai’s high-definition drive-tight on the backbeat, fearless when the meters start to bend. Michele Papadia adds Hammond grit and electric-piano shimmer, widening the harmonic canvas as the quartet moves from lean funk vamps to open, melodic jazz-rock studio-clean in tone, live-wire in momentum.

Profile

Allen Hinds Quartet brings groove fusion into a modern, song-forward frame-equal parts blues narrative, jazz harmony, and rock attitude. Hinds’ lyrical phrasing and expressive articulation lead the line, while Jimmy Haslip anchors the band with a producer’s ear and an electric sound that can feel as warm and upright-like as it is punchy. Gergo Borlai adds high-definition fusion vocabulary without losing the jazz feel, turning metric shifts into momentum rather than complexity. Michele Papadia widens the harmonic spectrum with Hammond and keys that can move from velvet pad work to biting, percussive comping an ideal foil for Hinds’ bends and melodic themes. The set stays built on groove: head-nodding backbeats, elastic pocket funk, and slow-burn blues that open into fearless improvisation and tight, conversational interplay.

Details

Allen Hinds A long-time first-call guitarist in contemporary jazz-blues contexts, with credits spanning soul, pop, and jazz crossover sessions. His writing favors melodic song-forms, dynamic builds, and tone-forward storytelling. Highlights include the 2016 release Fly South. (“Imagine a player with the taste of Robben Ford, the fearless melodicism of Jeff Beck and the joyous musicality of Derek Trucks.” — Jason Sidwell, MusicRadar, 2017-05-10)

Jimmy Haslip Cofounding voice of modern fusion bass, known for lyricism, articulation, and harmonic clarity. Equally at home as sideman and producer, shaping ensembles from the inside out. His work is often praised for bringing an upright-like elegance to the electric instrument. (“Haslip is a most lyrical musician, and he brings the elegant tone of an upright bass to his electric model.” — Ian Patterson, All About Jazz, 2011-05-04)

Gergő Borlai A fusion powerhouse with a broad vocabulary—speed, precision, and deep listening in equal measure. Credits include work alongside rock/fusion icons and a strong footprint in modern jazz contexts. His playing turns technical firepower into narrative energy and forward motion. (“Oh, he can shred—boy, can he shred.” — Ilya Stemkovsky, Modern Drummer, 2018-11-30)

Michele Papadia Keyboardist, composer, arranger, and producer with a reputation for high-impact groove playing and rich harmonic color. Active across jazz-fusion and blues-rock circuits, including long-term work in international touring line-ups. His keys parts are valued for shaping the identity of recordings from the earliest demos. (“Michele Papadia, with me for 17 years… sent me keys parts for the first demos of the songs and I kept them all.” — Ana Popovic, American Blues Scene, 2023-05-02)

Biographies

Allen Hinds

Allen Hinds is a guitar storyteller whose career sits at the crossroads of blues grit, jazz harmony, and modern fusion drive. Raised in Auburn, Alabama and drawn early to blues and R&B, he pushed toward jazz and fusion as a teenager and studied at Berklee before relocating to Los Angeles to attend Musicians Institute. In MI’s own profile of his path, that move was made possible by the Larry Carlton Scholarship, and Hinds has remained closely tied to the school as a long-standing faculty member in jazz improvisation and phrasing.

In L.A., Hinds built the kind of résumé that only comes from being consistently called for the right gigs: tracking and touring across soul, pop, and jazz-adjacent sessions with major artists and bandleaders while also cultivating his own catalogue. His playing has been repeatedly described in terms of “taste” and melodic fearlessness vocal-like bends, liquid legato, and a climactic sense of solo architecture that makes improvisation feel like narrative. That dual identity-first-call sideman and leader with a signature voice shows up in how he writes: tight, song-centered forms that can expand into open improvisation without losing their arc.

Hinds’ music has also found a life in broadcast placements, with compositions used across TV and cable programming, reinforcing a key point about his artistry: hooks matter as much as chops. As a leader he frames groove as the engine and melody as the headline blues-rooted themes, jazz-inflected chord movement, and rock-ready dynamics that keep the audience locked in even when the harmony and phrasing get adventurous. The arc of his career is defined less by stylistic pivots than by deepening: the same unmistakable tone applied to increasingly refined writing, increasingly conversational ensembles, and an ever-clearer sense of what makes a guitar line memorable.

Jimmy Haslip

Jimmy Haslip is one of the defining electric bass voices in contemporary jazz-fusion a musician whose career spans virtuosic performance, composition, and a major body of work as a producer. For more than three decades he was a core figure in Yellowjackets; in a 2020 interview he reflected on spending 32 years with the band and then stepping away in 2012 as touring demands collided with a growing production workload and a desire to be closer to family. That long arc helped set the template for modern fusion: a rhythm section that can be both pocket-deep and harmonically agile, supporting strong melodies without sacrificing risk.

Haslip’s role was never limited to “the bass chair.” He shaped sound and direction from the inside, contributing as a writer and as a studio-minded architect of the rhythm section. In interviews he has described making records as a social and musical craft: gathering players, shaping atmosphere, and protecting the song’s identity through the recording process. A JazzTimes conversation captures how seriously he takes that craft, framing production as its own discipline and describing a catalog that runs deep into dozens of albums.

Recognition has followed that breadth. Yellowjackets’ long GRAMMY history is well documented by the Recording Academy, and Haslip’s own credits include multiple GRAMMY wins and a long run of nominations an indicator not just of playing excellence but of sustained relevance across projects and decades. Musically, his signature is lyricism with authority: a full tone, precise articulation, and harmonic intelligence that lets the bass function as both anchor and melodic counter-voice. Even when working at the highest technical level, his lines remain singable always serving the music first, which is exactly why so many artists trust him with the foundation.

Gergő Borlai

Gergő Borlai represents the modern fusion drummer at full bandwidth: explosive technique, deep time, and an ear for arrangement that turns virtuosity into story. Originally from Hungary, he developed early as a professional player in his teens and later expanded into an international career as a session, touring, and recording drummer, as well as a composer and producer. The through-line is not just speed or precision, but the ability to make complex rhythmic information feel like momentum odd meters that breathe, metric shifts that land like downbeats.

Borlai’s discography and live profile connect him to a broad network of high-level fusion and contemporary jazz artists guitar heroes, modern bass innovators, and cross-genre projects where the drummer is expected to carry both precision and personality. Industry bios and festival line-ups regularly cite an unusually high volume of recordings and performances, alongside an awards footprint tied to his work in Hungary and beyond: gold-record acknowledgements, major national prizes, and prominent international visibility.

His career has also been marked by headline milestones in the drumming world. In 2019 he placed third in Modern Drummer’s reader poll for “Best All-Around Drummer,” and in 2021 a legacy manufacturer released a signature snare drum developed with him. A 2025 profile also notes that his 2020 solo album The Missing Song was in consideration for GRAMMY recognition, while his broader public presence has grown through clinics and educator roles that bring his approach to drummers worldwide.

Importantly, those achievements have not pulled him away from the working drummer’s craft; they have amplified it. Borlai’s most consistent calling card is that he makes technical content feel human groove-first, reactive to the band, and always aimed at lifting the music rather than displaying the machinery.

Michele Papadia

Michele Papadia is an Italian keyboardist, composer, arranger, and producer whose career has been built in the engine room of contemporary blues and groove-based music: touring bands, high-pressure sessions, and the day-to-day discipline of making songs work. His musical identity is rooted in Afro-American traditions blues, funk, soul, and jazz filtered through a modern player’s toolkit: Hammond organ authority, electric-piano nuance, clavinet bite, and a producer’s instinct for what a track needs.

Papadia’s profile is strongly tied to long-term collaborations, especially in the international blues-rock circuit where consistency and trust matter. A vivid example comes from Ana Popovic’s own account of making the album Power (2023): Papadia described as working with her for 17 years at that point sent keyboard parts for the earliest demos, and those original parts were kept in the final masters while other elements were recorded around them. It is a telling detail: he is not only a live band member, but a foundational voice in the production chain, shaping arrangement and feel from the earliest stage.

In interviews, Papadia has also described formative “professional rites of passage” that map his path from Italy to the wider touring world: high-level encounters, sessions, and tours that placed him in demanding contexts where taste and reliability matter as much as vocabulary. Those experiences sit behind his practical musical philosophy: the blues is not a museum piece but a living language, strengthened by groove, call-and-response, and the ability to support a singer or guitarist while still adding harmonic depth.

Across his work as a musician and educator, Papadia’s signature is the same: parts that lock the pocket, color the harmony, and make the song feel inevitable—whether on a festival stage or inside the studio, where a great take can become the identity of the record.

Quotes

Hinds

Haslip

Papadia

Borlai

Dany Noel Cuban Collective — Detalles | Cuban Jazz / Latin Jazz (CU/ES)

Dany Noel Cuban Collective — Detalles | Cuban Jazz / Latin Jazz (CU/ES)

Dany Noel Cuban Collective

Cuban Jazz / Latin Jazz (CU/ES)

 AVAILABILITY FOR EUROPE
2026 | July / August / September

Style

A journey of fusion from the heart of Cuban Latin Jazz: Afro-Cuban pulse, modern harmony and funk propulsion—DETALLES turns micro-textures into big emotion, on record and on stage.

Profile

Recognized as one of the most versatile and expressive bassists on the international scene, Dany Noel is a key figure in the evolution of contemporary Latin Jazz. Originally from Cuba, he is a bassist and composer who has found his voice within the vibrant world of Latin Jazz. With a strong background in both traditional Cuban music and contemporary jazz, he has been part of major ensembles both on the island and internationally.

He stands out for his virtuosity, rhythmic sensitivity, and his ability to craft a unique musical language—one where Afro-Cuban roots meet jazz, flamenco, funk, and wider world-music colours. In his latest project, DETALLES, Dany Noel offers a sonic fusion that transcends genres, blending Latin Jazz with Afro-Cuban elements and funk. This work highlights not only his prowess as a bassist but also his vision as a producer and architect of a contemporary proposal full of nuance, colour, and emotion.

DETALLES is an invitation to listen beyond the obvious: to dive into the textures of rhythm and harmony, and to rediscover the richness of Cuban music from a modern, global perspective. More than just an album, it is a musical statement where technical precision meets heartfelt emotion. Each piece is carefully crafted to showcase the beauty of the small, the intimate, the essential. Dany Noel leads from the bass with elegance—also with his voice—and with the rhythmic drive that defines his signature.

Originally conceived as a trio recording, the project explores subtleties of rhythm and melody with a modern, minimalist aesthetic. In its live version, DETALLES evolves into something bigger: a vibrant collective experience with a full band of eight musicians on stage. With the expanded line-up, the music becomes a thrilling performance—where improvisation, polyrhythms and the energy of live interplay connect the audience to the pure essence of contemporary Latin fusion.

Details

DETALLES blends Latin Jazz with Afro-Cuban elements and funk, balancing technical precision with a direct emotional narrative.

Studio-born as a trio-minded concept with a modern, minimalist aesthetic, the repertoire expands live into a full-band set that amplifies energy, polyrhythm and real-time interaction.

The live format features bass and voice at the centre, surrounded by piano, electric guitar, trumpet, drums, percussion and two backing vocalists—built for call-and-response, groove development and open improvisation.

(“Noel was ripping through a fast solo while simultaneously vocalising it.” — Sebastian Scotney, London Jazz News, 2016-10-02)

Line-up

Dany Noel | Bass & Voice
Cuban-born bassist/composer; bass-led writing, vocal phrasing and Afro-Cuban rhythmic drive at the core of the project.

Adrián Esteves | Piano
Modern voicings and montuno-derived comping; harmonic colour and rhythmic propulsion.

Dani Morales | Drums
Drum-set architecture that shifts between tight funk articulation and open Latin-jazz swing.

Haime Vázquez | Congas
Afro-Cuban percussion layers, tumbao-support and conversational accents with the drum set.

Raúl Venegas | Guitar
Electric-guitar colours: rhythmic hooks, counterlines, and textural support for the melodic writing.

Julio Rigal | Trumpet
Brass lead voice: melodic statements, bright call-and-response and improvisational lift.

Agnese | Backing Vocals
Vocal textures and rhythmic unisons; expands the chorus dimension of the live set.

Elizabeth | Backing Vocals
Backing-vocal power and phrasing; reinforces the groove and opens timbral contrast in the arrangements.

Discography Highlights

DETALLES (album, 2024)

Intercambio (album, 2022)

Haciendo Camino (album, 2020)

Por la Habana (album, 2017)

Tinta Unida (album, 2013)

CONFIDENCE (album, 2013 — with Dario Chiazzolino)

Proposición (album, 2011)

Dime Si Tú Sabes (album, 2006 — as Duo Chocolate)

Mi Sentir (album, 2007)


QUOTES

  1. “Noel was ripping through a fast solo while simultaneously vocalising it.” — Sebastian Scotney, London Jazz News, 2016-10-02

  2. (Translation) “The bottom-end of things is held firm by the superb rumbling of Dany Noel’s bass lines.” — Raul Da Gama, Latin Jazz Network, 2020-12-10

  3. “The accompaniment … is punchy and crisp on a wide soundstage …” — Peghead Nation (review), 2020-09-12

  4. (Translation) “I started playing at the age of 10… and I don’t think I’ll ever stop as long as I have the strength.” — Dany Noel (quoted), Laura Lipari, LetteraEmme, 2022-05-18

  5. (Translation) “Dany Noel Cuban project — Detalles …” — WhatsApp message (provided by user), 2026-01-21


REVIEWS / ARTICLES

REVIEW: Alex Wilson and Friends at the 2016 London Latin Jazz Festival — London Jazz News — Sebastian Scotney — 2016-10-02

David Broza: en Casa Limón — Latin Jazz Network — Raul Da Gama — 2020-12-10

David Broza Celebrates the Spanish Guitar — Peghead Nation — 2020-09-12

Article: Dany Noel presents “Intercambio” at Retronoveau (Thursday jazz night) — LetteraEmme — Laura Lipari — 2022-05-18

Article: Dany Noel Confluence Trio at “Il Torrione” (Oct 21) — Informagiovani Ferrara — 2023-10-19

City programme announcement: “Madrid, a Christmas postcard” fills the city with music… — madrid.es — 2025-11-21

City programme announcement: Madrid lives a Christmas full of music and tradition — madrid.es — 2025-12-12

Track page: “Briga · Dany Noel (Detalles)” — YouTube (Provided to YouTube by CDBaby) — 2024-04-08

Internal / provided material: “EN — Dany Noel Band — Detalles” (PDF, undated)

AfroCuban Reunión

AFROCUBAN REUNIÓN | Afro-Cuban Jazz Fusion CU/RE

AfroCuban Reunión

Dany Noel, Meddy Gerville, Dani Morales

Afro-Cuban Jazz Fusion (CU/RE)

 AVAILABILITY FOR EUROPE

2026 | June 11th to 28th

Line Up

Dany Noel | Bass & voice
Chucho Valdés, Horacio “El Negro” Hernández, Roy Hargrove, Diego El Cigala, Bebo Valdés, Buika, Tony Succar, Nella, Ojos de Brujo, Giovanni Hidalgo, Omara Portuondo, Changuito

Meddy Gerville | Keyboards & voice
Wyclef Jean, Randy Brecker, Giovanni Hidalgo, Nguyên Lê, Horacio Hernandez, Dominique Di Piazza, Louis Winsberg, Lionel Louéké

Dani Morales | Drums & percussion
Jorge Pérez, Aurora García, Jorge Vera, Raúl Venegas, Miguel Núñez, Albita, Lolita, Christian Tonos

Pitch

Three islands, one groove: maloya from Réunion, Afro‑Cuban folkloric drive, and modern jazz harmony.
Singing bass & voice, percussive keys, and drums that pivot from dance‑floor clarity to open improvisation.
A rhythm‑forward trio set designed for jazz and world stages.

Style

AfroCuban Reunión is a three‑way conversation between Réunion Island’s maloya pulse, Afro‑Cuban folkloric drive, and contemporary jazz harmony. Dany Noel anchors the sound with a singing bass and voice—tumbao weight, melodic counterlines, and storytelling phrasing—while Meddy Gerville answers with percussive keys, chant‑like motifs, and Creole‑tinted voicings that keep the music ritual‑leaning and modern at once. Dani Morales keeps the current moving: Afro‑Cuban pulse on the kit and timbales, elastic swing, and sharp dynamic turns that let the trio flip from groove to open improvisation without losing the body.

Profile

AfroCuban Reunión brings together three musicians shaped by deep, place‑specific traditions and an outward‑looking jazz language. Meddy Gerville carries the circular, trance‑leaning energy of maloya into a keyboard vocabulary that can sound percussive, orchestral, or prayer‑like. Dany Noel turns Afro‑Cuban forms (son, rumba, bolero) into open frameworks for interplay, using bass and voice as equal melodic forces—supporting, commenting, and occasionally leading. Dani Morales completes the triangle with a drummer‑percussionist’s command of Afro‑Cuban timelines—cáscara and songo logic on the kit, timbal color when needed—building layered grooves that stay dance‑clear while opening space for improvisation.

The result is vivid and immediate: rhythm‑forward, melodically direct, and improvisational at its core.

Repertoire

The trio’s set blends originals and tradition. As Noel puts it: “We’d play Meddy’s tunes, my Latin‑jazz themes, and a traditional Cuban song sung by me—with jazz always in the influence.” Expect a journey that can touch bolero, son and guaracha, alongside contemporary jazz improvisation.

Members

Dany Noel

Cuban bassist and vocalist with deep roots in Latin jazz and flamenco, Noel is a bandleader and a sought‑after collaborator. His writing privileges groove and song‑form, while his bass lines stay vocal and narrative—often doubling as a second melodic voice. He co‑founded ITALUBA with Horacio “El Negro” Hernández (Grammy‑nominated for ITALUBA 1), and has participated in multiple award‑winning projects (Latin GRAMMY and other international recognitions).

(“Invites us on a fresh and fascinating musical journey that shows the essence of Latin jazz and the culture of his country.” — Ladbroke Hall, 2025-03-07)

Meddy Gerville

Gerville’s keyboard work fuses Creole songfulness with modern jazz touch: left‑hand ostinati, chant‑like motifs, and harmonies that open the music without diluting its roots. His phrasing balances clarity and surprise—often building long arcs over steady, ritual‑like cycles. As a vocalist he favors direct, earthy delivery that sits naturally inside the groove.

(“Grooves from the first note… and the set is a fine one.” — Peter McLaren, Jazz in Europe, 2017-02-14 — translated)

Dani Morales

Madrid‑based Cuban drummer and percussionist (kit & timbales), Morales moves fluently between Afro‑Cuban vocabulary, jazz time, and high‑energy stage formats. Documented in European listings with Dany Noel’s trio and in Patáx lineups, he plays as a groove architect: tight timeline control, quick orchestrations across the kit, and a clear sense of lift that keeps melodies and vocals supported without over‑filling.

(“With Dani Morales on drums… they deliver high‑quality music from the first moment and never stop surprising.” — Natalia Eseverri, El Arcón de Natalia, 2024-10-03 — translated)

Awards

  • Dany NoelITALUBA 1 (Grammy nomination, Best Latin Jazz Album, 2004); participation in Latin GRAMMY‑winning projects (incl. El Último Trago; Más De Mí).

  • Meddy Gerville — Pian’Austral competition prize (2000) (as reported in musician bios).

  • Dani Morales — No independently verifiable major awards found in dated mainstream sources reviewed; documented performance credits with Dany Noel Trio and Patáx in European press.

Releases

Dany Noel

  • INCOHERENTE SOCIEDAD (feat. Chabuco) — Single — 2025-12-17

  • Detalles — Album — 2024-04-08

  • Intercambio — Album — 2022-04-26

Meddy Gerville

  • Tropical Rain — Album — 2025-02-12

  • Lèr larivé — Single — 2024-12-16

  • Le larm dan mon zié (version Séga) — Single — 2023-11-22

Dani Morales

  • La razón — Single (YOSU LAROCA) — 2025-12-13

  • Cántale a la Vida — Single (Albita & Lolita) — 2025-08-22

  • Traigo de Todo (feat. Dany Noel) — Single (Christian Tonos) — 2025-07-31


Press

All excerpts below are translated into English for editorial use. Keep the original links for verification.

Project

  • “AfroCuban Reunion… closes the XXIV edition” — Jazzitalia (staff), 2025-08-04
    Excerpt: “An intense sonic journey between Réunion, Cuba and Europe… maloya, Afro‑Cuban and modern jazz… colors, ancestral rhythms and improvisation.

  • AFROCUBAN REUNION — artist page — BeatOnto Jazz Festival (staff), 2025-07-02
    Excerpt: “A trio that fuses Réunion roots, Afro‑Cuban energy and contemporary jazz… bold improvisations and rhythms that speak to heart and body.

Noel

  • “Dany Noel Cuban Project — Jazz & Dinner” — Ladbroke Hall (event page), 2025-03-07
    Excerpt: “A fresh and fascinating musical journey… the essence of Latin jazz… bolero, son, guaracha… and unreleased original songs.

  • “Dany Noel Trio feat Ivo Neame & Jorge Perez” — EFG London Jazz Festival (event listing), 2023-11-11
    Excerpt: “A new project led by Cuban bass virtuoso and singer Dany Noel…

  • “En Casa Limon” (album review) — Phillip Woolever, All About Jazz, 2021-01-24
    Excerpt: “Percussionist Israel Suárez and bassist Dany Noel provide admirable support throughout.

Gerville

  • “Tropical Rain — Meddy Gerville Trio” — Dot Time Records (label page), 2017-02-17
    Excerpt: “Grooves from the first note… and the set is a fine one.

  • Meddy Gerville — musician bio — All About Jazz (staff), 2017-07-18
    Excerpt: Mentions maloya roots and the Pian’Austral prize (2000).

Morales

  • “Crónica «Patáx» (Teatro Cervantes, Málaga)” — Natalia Eseverri, El Arcón de Natalia, 2024-10-03

  • Excerpt: “With Dani Morales on drums… high‑quality music from the first moment… never stop surprising.”

Sources

https://www.jazzitalia.net/beatonto-jazz-festival-afrocuban-reunion-e-lisa-manosperti-chiudono-la-xxiv-edizione/
https://www.beatontojazz.com/index.php/il-jazz-festival/edizione-2024/artisti?id=171&task=view
https://iltaccodibacco.it/puglia/eventi/300242.html
https://www.cronachetarantine.it/2025/08/06/jonio-jazz-festival-si-chiude-con-il-trio-afrocuban-reunion/

https://ladbrokehall.com/live-programme/jazz/dany-noel-cuban-project-4/
https://efglondonjazzfestival.org.uk/events/dany-noel-trio-feat-ivo-neame-jorge-perez
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/en-casa-limon-david-broza-s-curve-records__32628

https://www.dottimerecords.com/news/2017/2/17/tropical-rain-meddy-gerville-trio
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/meddy-gerville

https://www.laringhiera.net/eventi/portanapoli-in-jazz-reloaded-levento-per-sostenere-la-fondazione-cittadella-della-carita/
https://madridenvivo.com/viernes-18-jazz-con-sabor-a-club22/
https://elarcondenatalia.es/cronica-patax-teatro-cervantes-malaga/
https://www.subbeticahoy.com/articulo/lucena/festival-jazz-principal-protagonista-programacion-cultural-mayo-lucena/20240508215349028910.html
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/canarias-jazz-y-mas-2025-jazz-festival-alba-festival-review
https://cadenaser.com/asturias/2025/04/21/jazz-en-el-centro-casi-tres-decadas-mostrando-un-genero-que-gana-adeptos-en-gijon-ser-gijon/

https://music.apple.com/gb/song/la-raz%C3%B3n/1858799462
https://music.apple.com/us/song/c%C3%A1ntale-a-la-vida/1831832681
https://music.apple.com/us/song/traigo-de-todo-feat-dany-noel/1825000509

https://danynoel.bandcamp.com/album/haciendo-camino
https://www.solarlatinclub.com/2020/10/dany-noel-haciendo-camino/

https://music.apple.com/it/artist/dany-noel/308604677
https://music.apple.com/us/album/intercambio/1620621654
https://music.apple.com/us/album/detalles/1739050670

https://music.apple.com/us/album/tropical-rain/1791218875
https://music.apple.com/us/album/l%C3%A8r-lariv%C3%A9-single/1783481921
https://music.apple.com/us/album/le-larm-dan-mon-zi%C3%A9-version-s%C3%A9ga-single/1713117826

https://www.latingrammy.com/awards/11th-annual-latin-grammy-awards-2010
https://www.latingrammy.com/artists/tony-succar/34354-01
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latin_Grammy_Award_for_Best_Traditional_Tropical_Album
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latin_Grammy_Award_for_Best_Salsa_Album