Happy Birthday Latin Jazz ⋆ Latin Jazz Birthday Song ⋆ Sing Me Happy Birthday

Happy Birthday
Latin Jazz Version

Happy Birthday Latin Jazz Version

Celebrate someone special with a personalized Latin Jazz Happy Birthday song!

Over 800 names to choose from. Create two Latin Jazz-themed cards: Birthday Slideshow & Singing Selfie.

Latin Jazz Birthday Wishes

Make your birthday card extra fun with our stylized Latin Jazz Birthday Wishes. Once you find the perfect one, click Singing Selfie or Birthday Slideshow to add it to your card.

Another year older? Time to mambo through life’s changes and cha-cha around those candles. 🎶🔥 Happy Birthday, ritmo master!
Feliz cumpleaños! 🎷 May your birthday swing harder than a salsa beat and end with you stealing the spotlight on the dance floor. 💃🎶
Forget the birthday speech—let the maracas do the talking. 🎶🎂 Hope your day’s got more rhythm than responsibilities!
Happy Birthday! 🎶 May your dance moves outshine your birthday candles—but don’t hurt yourself trying the high kicks. 🎷🎂
Happy Birthday! 🎷 Don’t just blow out the candles, hit them with a full trumpet solo—go big or go home! 🎺🎂
Happy Birthday! 🎷 If your day were a jazz piece, it’d be all improvisation—chaos, laughter, and way too much dessert. 🎂🍰
Happy Birthday! 🎺 If life’s a Latin Jazz jam, today’s your solo—hit those high notes and don’t forget the cake break! 🎂🥁
Hope your birthday is spicier than a trumpet riff and smoother than a conga beat. 🎶🎂 But careful, no cake fights during the clave!
Your birthday party should come with a warning: ‘May cause uncontrollable salsa dancing and cake-induced food comas!’ 🎺🎂

ARTIST PROFILE: Dubi Dolczek

Daring pilot, intrepid explorer, seminal crab anthropologist and musician…
After his stunning achievements in rendering the crab myths of old into human song forms Dubi begins work on his memoirs, opening with his spacetravels as a teenage greaseball. Talk of various aliens and robots arriving in the quadrant and late-night jams on Dubi’s moonbase seem to confirm rumours of a reunion of sorts…

Dubi Dolczek’s Bandcamp
Count Bobo’s Bandcamp

Other Musicians

Mark Whitlam – Drums
Greg Cordez – Bass
Nick Malcolm – Trumpet

Dubi Dolczek sings Happy Birthday

An introduction to Latin Jazz

Latin jazz is a fusion of jazz and Cuban and Spanish Caribbean music.
Latin Jazz is a vibrant fusion of Afro-Cuban rhythms and the improvisational spirit of jazz, born from cultural crossroads in the mid-20th century. Pioneers like Dizzy Gillespie and Mario Bauzá brought Cuban beats into the bebop scene, while artists like Tito Puente and Mongo Santamaría infused the genre with pulsating congas, timbales, and clave patterns. This musical dialogue between Latin America and the U.S. gave rise to unforgettable classics like “Oye Como Va” and “Afro Blue,” blending melodic sophistication with irresistible grooves.

Decades later, the genre continues to inspire with its electrifying energy and universal appeal, connecting people through its celebratory rhythms. Whether it’s the dynamic brass of a salsa band or the intimate sway of a bossa nova tune, Latin Jazz has a way of speaking to the soul, making it timeless and unforgettable.

So let’s sing Happy Birthday, Latin Jazz style, and celebrate your special day with vibrant rhythms, soulful melodies, and all the joy that makes life a fiesta. ¡Feliz cumpleaños!

Pioneers of Latin Jazz

1. Tito Puente – “King of Latin Jazz,” fused Afro-Cuban rhythms with jazz; Oye Como Va.
2. Dizzy Gillespie – Integrated Latin rhythms into bebop, collaborating with Cuban artists; Manteca.
3. Chucho Valdés – Cuban pianist blending traditional jazz with Afro-Cuban music; Misa Negra.
4. Machito – Pioneered the Afro-Cuban jazz movement with big band arrangements; Tanga.
5. Cal Tjader – Popularized Latin jazz with his vibraphone-driven sound; Soul Sauce.
6. Paquito D’Rivera – Virtuoso saxophonist and clarinetist pushing the boundaries of Latin jazz; Song for Maura.
7. Clare Fischer – Innovator in Latin jazz with his harmonic complexity; Morning.
8. Arturo Sandoval – Trumpet master blending jazz virtuosity with Cuban rhythms; A Mis Abuelos.
9. Mongo Santamaría – Iconic conguero who bridged Latin music and jazz; Afro Blue.
10. Antonio Carlos Jobim – Bossa nova pioneer whose compositions enriched Latin jazz; The Girl from Ipanema.