Giovanni Hidalgo a.k.a. "Mañenguito" (born November 22, 1963) is a
Latin jazz percussionist.
Early years
Hidalgo was born in
San Juan, Puerto Rico, where he received his primary education. His grandfather was a musician, and his father, José Manuel Hidalgo "Mañengue", was a renowned
conga player. Hidalgo was raised in a household surrounded by drums, bongos, congas, and timbales.[1] For his eighth birthday, he received a conga which was handmade by his father. As a young child he practiced and developed his skills on the conga and on other instruments in his house. Hidalgo would drum a tune with sticks and then play the same tune with his hands.[2]
Music career
Hidalgo auditioned and was hired by the Batacumbele Band in 1980. In 1981, he traveled with the band to Cuba, where he met a musician by the name José Luis Quintana, a.k.a.
Changuito. They created a style of rhythm that ushered in a new era in Latin music.[1][2]
In 1985, Hidalgo was performing with
Eddie Palmieri at the
Village Gate in New York City when
Dizzy Gillespie walked in and listened to him play. Gillespie was so impressed with Hidalgo that he told him that someday in the future they must get together and play. In 1988 Hidalgo joined Gillespie's United Nation Orchestra.[1]
In 1992, Hidalgo was hired as an adjunct professor at the
Berklee College of Music in Boston. He taught many types of rhythm: Puerto Rican, Cuban, Dominican,
reggae, African, and jazz. He held this academic position until 1996.
On October 31, 2010, he performed with the rock band
Phish during their Halloween concert. The band performed
Waiting for Columbus by
Little Feat with Hildalgo on percussion (with the exception of "Don't Bogart That Joint", which was performed a cappella) and a brass section of Aaron Johnson, Stuart Bogie, Ian Hendrickson,
Michael Leonhart, and Eric Biondo.[3]
In October 2016, the ring finger of his left hand was amputated due to an infection related to diabetes. In March, 2017 a benefit for him was held at the Lehman Center for the Performing Arts in the Bronx, New York to assist him with his expenses.[4] Since that time much of his left-hand playing has been done with a stick.
In May 2010, Hidalgo was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Music from
Berklee College of Music during the sixteenth consecutive year that faculty members from the school visited Puerto Rico for one of its global outreach programs.[5]