Search results
Career. The Raul Midón Trio live @ Leverkusener Jazztage 2017. Midon began his career as a session singer for Latin recording artists including Shakira, Alejandro Sanz, Julio Iglesias, and Jose Feliciano. After touring with Shakira, he moved to New York City to pursue a solo career.
Singer, Songwriter, Guitarist and Engineer, Raul Midón established himself as a first-call session singer upon graduation from the prestigious Studio Jazz program at the University of Miami in 1991. He sang background vocals on more than 60 Latin recordings, many Grammy winning.
Oct 18, 2023 · Raul Midon is known for creating his own unique musical world where soul, pop and latin music converge, and his “percussive guitar syncopations and supple, high-flying tenor" (NY Times) run free. On September 25, he'll reveal A World Within A World with his second album for Manhattan/EMI.
- November 21, 2024
Raul Midon is a musician who prefers a mix of “smooth folk”, “alt-pop” and “jazz” in his music. He is an entertainer who skillfully combines these genres in his live performances and manages to entertain and entertain his audience with high energy and fun.
Jun 5, 2024 · In late April, blind singer/songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Raul Midón released his new self-produced album Lost & Found, featuring various friends and accomplices including Andrés Forero (Hamilton, Phish, U2) on drums and percussion, Richard Hammond (Hamilton) on bass, and Federico Peña (Black Lives: From Generation to Generation) on ...
While he makes subtle adjustments in his playing to complement his special guests, it is his masterful rhythm playing, captivating chord voicings and lyrical soloing that make Eclectic Adventurist a surprisingly refreshing and cohesive artistic statement.
People also ask
Who is Midón and what does he do?
Who is Raul Midon?
What is Midon used for in treatment?
Who is John Midón?
Is Raul Midon a lucky man?
Is Midon Catholic?
Sep 12, 2018 · Raul Midon: If You Really Want. Raul Midon plays guitar and sings like Paul Simon. Born blind in New Mexico in 1966, The New York Times once called him "a one-man band who turns a guitar into an orchestra and his voice into a chorus." He was going somewhere once upon a time. Now he's back, still going somewhere.