By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Entertainment MagazineEntertainment Magazine
  • Home
  • NewsLive
  • Celebrity
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Fashion
Search
Women
  • Beauty
  • Health
  • Food
Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Fitness
  • Culture
World
  • United States
  • Europe
  • Asia
  • About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
© 2022 All Rights Reserved – Entertainment Magazine.
Reading: Polito Vega, Salsa ‘King’ of New York Radio, Dies at 84
Share
Sign In
Notification Show More
Latest News
Ice-T Reveals Whether He and Coco Austin Will Have Another Baby
March 27, 2023
‘Succession’ Season 4 Premiere Recap: Many Happy Returns
March 27, 2023
Jeremy Renner Walks in Anti-Gravity Treadmill After Snowplow Accident
March 27, 2023
Olaplex No. 5 Conditioner Is Changing Our Hair for the Better
March 27, 2023
Celebrities With Las Vegas Residencies
March 27, 2023
Aa
Entertainment MagazineEntertainment Magazine
Aa
  • Home
  • News
  • Celebrity
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Culture
  • Fashion
  • Beauty
  • Food
  • Travel
Search
  • News
  • Celebrity
  • Bookmarks
  • Sections
    • Lifestyle
    • Entertainment
    • Beauty
    • Culture
    • Fashion
Follow US
  • About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
© 2022 All Rights Reserved – Entertainment Magazine.
Entertainment Magazine > Culture > Polito Vega, Salsa ‘King’ of New York Radio, Dies at 84
Culture

Polito Vega, Salsa ‘King’ of New York Radio, Dies at 84

Press Room
Press Room March 18, 2023
Updated 2023/03/18 at 10:58 PM
Share
8 Min Read
SHARE

Polito Vega, an exuberant announcer with a booming bass voice and a finely attuned ear whose Spanish-language shows popularized salsa music in New York in the mid-1960s, died on March 9 in North Bergen, N.J. He was 84.

His death was announced by his family. No cause was given.

After abandoning his dreams of becoming a singer, Mr. Vega began his broadcasting career in 1960, shortly after transplanting himself from Puerto Rico to New York. He quickly distinguished himself on air with his signature voice, his perky epigrams like “Andando, andando, andando” (“Keep going”) and his adventurous playlists. He also distinguished himself in person, at concerts and dances, with his ubiquitous Yankees cap, starched white guayabera shirt, white goatee and fuzzy sideburns.

The disc jockey and recording artist Alex Sensation described Mr. Vega on Instagram as “the architect of Hispanic radio at a global level.”

In an obituary in Billboard magazine, Leila Cobo, the author of “Decoding ‘Despacito’: An Oral History of Latin Music” (2020), wrote: “Vega’s importance to Latin music cannot be overstated. He was the most influential tastemaker in the country’s top market, dating back to when tropical music first became popular in the city in the 1960s and 1970s and stretching all the way to the 21st century.”

He was heard on two New York AM stations, first WEVD and then WBNX, and finally on WSKQ (Mega 97.9 FM) — which began broadcasting as a full-time Spanish-language format in 1989 and has often been rated No. 1 in that market. He also became the station’s program director.

When Mr. Vega began broadcasting, he recalled, he was struck by the disconnect between the comparatively temperate bolero music that dominated Latin broadcasting and the feverish salsa he was encountering in nightclubs. He was among the first radio personalities to recognize the market for salsa, identifying promising talent and mentoring gifted musicians.

“It was two different worlds in those early days,” Mr. Vega said told The New York Times in 2009. “At the dance halls and up in the Catskills you would hear the Tito Puente and Machito orchestras tearing things up, but on the radio the kind of thing you heard was romantic trios, unless you were tuning in to Symphony Sid” — the prominent jazz D.J. who began playing Afro-Cuban music in the 1960s — “late at night.”

The trombonist Willie Colón, who became one of salsa’s biggest stars, recalled that the first time he heard Yomo Toro, the maestro of the 10-string guitar known as the cuatro, with whom he would later collaborate on several recordings, “was on Polito’s show, playing along with listeners who would call in and sing over the telephone.”

In the late 1960s, Mr. Colón got a break when he was invited to appear on “Club de la Juventud,” an “American Bandstand”-inspired TV show that Mr. Vega hosted on the Telemundo network from 1967 to 1970.

Among the other musicians whose careers Mr. Vega helped promote were Celia Cruz, Tito Puente and Ismael Miranda.

Hipólito Vega Torres was born on Aug. 3, 1938, in Ponce, on the southern coast of Puerto Rico. His father was a bus driver, and the young Hipólito sold newspapers on the beach to supplement his family’s income.

He began calling himself Polito as a teenager after winning an amateur singing competition, only to be told by the contest’s master of ceremonies that he would never become a celebrity with a name like Hipólito.

In 1957 he moved to New York City, where he lived with an uncle near Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx and worked as a shipping clerk while trying to get a break in the music business.

“I came to New York as a skinny little kid with a wisp of a mustache, hoping to make it as a singer,” he said in 2009.

Johnny Pacheco, the Dominican-born flutist, bandleader, songwriter and producer, knew Mr. Vega in those days. “Even before Polito got a job, he was already an announcer,” Mr. Pacheco, who died in 2021, told The Times. “He used to go to a barbershop owned by a compadre of mine, and I remember how he was always joking and kidding around there, imitating announcers and singers and talking as if he were already on the air.”

One night in 1960 he was helping a friend who was hosting “Fiesta Time,” a half-hour show on WEVD; as his friend’s sidekick, he read listeners’ names and record requests on the air. The station’s owner heard his voice and hired him as an announcer.

“Radio fever got into my head,” Mr. Vega recalled.

When WEVD expanded to 24-hour programming not long after that, he was offered the midnight-to-6 a.m. slot.

“The show,” he later said, “was so successful and I felt that liberty to express myself that I’ve maintained to this day.”

Mr. Pacheco, who co-founded Fania Records in 1964 as New York was supplanting Cuba as a center for emerging Latin music, described Mr. Vega in 2009 as “part of the whole salsa movement, one of its pillars.”

“As we were building the company,” he added, “he was there with us. I’d bring him the LPs, he’d listen and say, ‘I like this song, I’m going to push it,’ and he’d play the hell out of it.”

Mr. Vega later moved to WBNX, where he became known as “El Rey de la Radio” — the King of Radio — and where he met Raúl Alarcón, the senior program director. Mr. Alarcón went on to become head of the Spanish Broadcasting System, where Mr. Vega was for many years executive vice president in charge of programming.

In 2009, Mr. Vega was honored at two all-star 50th-anniversary concerts at Madison Square Garden. Three years later he was celebrated at Citi Field in Queens by a lineup that included Gloria Estefan and Daddy Yankee.

Mr. Vega’s wife, Judith, died last year. His survivors include two sons and a daughter. Two other sons died before him.

In a statement, his family asked that his fans not mourn but “celebrate his legacy,” adding: “Polito continues to live in the music that he loved and shared, as well as the impact he left in the Latin community. Polito lived happiness, smiles and love. We would like for all his fans to live life to the fullest, as he did.”

You Might Also Like

‘Succession’ Season 4 Premiere Recap: Many Happy Returns

‘Nemesis’ Review: A Philip Roth Adaptation Resonates

Little Lionsgate Soars to the Top With John Wick Ticket Sales

Scott Johnson, Playfully Inventive Composer, Is Dead at 70

Book Review: ‘At the Drop of a Cat,’ written by Élise Fontenaille and illustrated by Violeta Lópiz, and ‘My Baba’s Garden,’ written by Jordan Scott and illustrated by Sydney Smith

Press Room March 18, 2023
Share this Article
Facebook TwitterEmail Print
Share
What do you think?
Love0
Sad0
Happy0
Sleepy0
Angry0
Dead0
Wink0
Previous Article ‘Mean Girls’ Author Slams Tina Fey, Threatens Paramount with Legal Action
Next Article Rihanna and Hailey Bieber Are Twinning in This Preppy Style for Spring
- Advertisement -
Ad imageAd image

Latest News

Ice-T Reveals Whether He and Coco Austin Will Have Another Baby
News March 27, 2023
‘Succession’ Season 4 Premiere Recap: Many Happy Returns
Culture March 27, 2023
Jeremy Renner Walks in Anti-Gravity Treadmill After Snowplow Accident
News March 27, 2023
Olaplex No. 5 Conditioner Is Changing Our Hair for the Better
Celebrity March 27, 2023

You Might also Like

Culture

‘Succession’ Season 4 Premiere Recap: Many Happy Returns

March 27, 2023
Culture

‘Nemesis’ Review: A Philip Roth Adaptation Resonates

March 27, 2023
Culture

Little Lionsgate Soars to the Top With John Wick Ticket Sales

March 27, 2023
Culture

Scott Johnson, Playfully Inventive Composer, Is Dead at 70

March 26, 2023
Entertainment MagazineEntertainment Magazine

© 2022 All Rights Reserved – Entertainment Magazine.

Removed from reading list

Undo
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?