Background
Ramón S. Sabat was born in San Fernando de Camarones, Cienfuegos, Cuba in 1902.
Ramón S. Sabat was born in San Fernando de Camarones, Cienfuegos, Cuba in 1902.
He had studied music in the United States as a youth, serving in the United States. Army in one of its bands, and completing his undergraduate degree in engineering at New York University. He studied music with José Rivero Rodríguez and learned to play the clarinet, the saxophone, the flute, and the piano.
He returned to Cuba where he worked in recording. He settled in Miami and founded another record company. At an early age he started showing his musical inclinations and talent.
In 1919, Ramón moved to the United States to study music
While in the United States, Ramón enlisted into the United States. Army and worked in one of the Army’s bands. After Ramón served the United States. Army, he attended New York University, graduating with a degree in engineering.
Sabat worked in different music labels and started various business ventures. In 1944, he opened the first record factory in Cuba, called Panart, and released its first recording, "Dry Leaf" by Carlos Alas del Casino.
Panart had a tough time getting started due to Radio Corporation of America Victor’s dominant position in the record market and the relatively new character of the record technology at the time.
Sabat’s business abilities and musical vision developed Panart as a successful label. By 1957, Ramón had been able to expand his label and had sold around a million records worldwide. Panart helped spread Cuban music throughout the world.
As the Cuban Revolution began, Ramon"s wife Julia Sabat sent copies of master tapes to New York City.
She was able to save about eighty percent of Panart’s catalogue. Julia devised a scheme to get Sabat out of Cuba and into the United States before all doors closed.
In 1961, Castro’s regime took over Panart and nationalized lieutenant Julia and Sabat settled in Miami.
Julia started a record factory in Hialeah with Sabat’s brother Galo.
Though the record label was not as successful as Panart, the music produced was bought by Cuban refugees, who wanted to be reminded of the good times before Cuba fell into communist hands. Ramón died from a heart aneurysm on March 15, 1986. He was buried in Our Lady of Mercy Cemetery in Miami, where his gravestone, adorned with a treble clef, reads "Así cantaba Cuba / That"s How Cuba Sang".