Manuela Josefa Cabrera and known as Fefita la Grande ""Louisiana Vieja Fefa"" or Louisiana Mayimba, she is the most prolific and respected female merengue accordionist of the Dominican Republic.
Background
"Fefa", as referred to by her closest friends and relatives, was born in San Ignacio de Sabaneta, Santiago Rodríguez, located in the Cibao Region of the Dominican Republic, the birthplace of the merengue and where almost all merengue tipico musicians hail from.
Career
She is also one of the most well-known representatives of the Perico Ripiao or Merengue tipico music genre, along with artists like Tatico Henriquez, Pedro Reynoso, El Ciego de Nagua, El Prodigio, Rafaelito and Raul Roman, Geovanny Polanco, Francisco Ulloa, and others Fefita taught herself accordion on her father"s Accordion and was already playing concerts for people as respected as Petan Trujillo (Dictator Rafael Trujillo"s brother), and appearing frequently on television and radio shows, as early as the age of 9. Cabrera had a unique style of playing merengue tipico, a kind that only she was able to produce.
Along with the early exponents of "new" merengue tipico, such as Tatico Henriquez, Samuelito Almonte, and El Ciego de Nagua, she added congas, saxophones, and electric bass to the tipico ensemble, which was originally composed of three musicians: an accordionist (using a diatonic 2-row accordion), a tambora player ("tamborero"), and güira player ("guirero").
Louisiana Mayimba was also the first to bring merengue tipico to European audiences. Performing with the likes of Krisspy and El Prodigio, she continues to appeal to the young.