Willie Colón Dies at 75: Salsa legend and Fania Records star behind ‘Idilio’


Willie Colón, Bronx born musical genius and salsa legend behind Idilio, dies at 75, leaving a lasting legacy in Latin music history.


Willie Colón, Legendary Salsa Musician and Fania Records Icon, Dies at 75© Bettmann Archive
FEBRUARY 21, 2026 2:20 PM EST

Willie Colón, the Bronx-born trombonist, composer, bandleader, and producer who helped define the sound and swagger of New York salsa, died Saturday at 75 from health complications. His family confirmed the news in a statement posted to his official social media accounts.

Colón had been admitted to St. Lawrence Presbyterian Hospital in Bronxville with breathing difficulties. His health had been fragile since 2021, when he and his wife, Julia, were involved in a serious car accident in North Carolina. 

Willie Colón, Latin Music Legend Behind ‘Idilio,’ Dies at 75

“It is with profound sadness that we announce the passing of our beloved husband, father, and renowned musician, Willie Colón,” the family’s statement read. “He passed away peacefully this morning, surrounded by his loving family.”

Colón died in New York, his manager confirmed to Telemundo’s Hoy Día. Almost immediately, tributes poured in from across the Latin music world and beyond, from salseros who grew up tracing his trombone lines note for note to younger artists who viewed his music as a blueprint for fearless cultural fusion.

Willie Colón Dies at 75: The Bronx-Born Salsa Pioneer Who Defined a Generation© Gladys Vega
Willie Colón Dies at 75: The Bronx-Born Salsa Pioneer Who Defined a Generation

For more than five decades, Colón’s music pulsed through block parties, bodegas, clubs, and concert halls. It was brash, streetwise, romantic, and unapologetically bold. If salsa became the soundtrack of a generation of Nuyorican pride, Colón was one of its most compelling narrators.

His grandmother Antonia, who had emigrated from Manat in northern Puerto Rico, raised Colón, who was born in the Bronx, New York. Throughout his childhood, she reminded him daily, “Don’t forget that you are Puerto Rican.”

Willie Colón Dies at 75: The Bronx-Born Salsa Pioneer Who Defined a Generation© Jason Koerner

From the Bronx to the World Stage

Willie Colón helped build modern salsa and shape the sound of New York Latin music in the 1960s and 1970s. A pioneering trombonist and bandleader for Fania Records, he broke through with Héctor Lavoe, creating raw, streetwise songs that reflected life in the Bronx and the Puerto Rican diaspora.

Willie Colón Dies at 75: The Bronx-Born Salsa Pioneer Who Defined a Generation© Paul Morigi

Over time, Colón grew into much more than a bandleader. He worked as a composer, arranger, producer, and solo artist, blending salsa with jazz, soul, and social commentary. Songs like “Idilio” and “Gitana” showed his range, pairing strong brass with sweeping, romantic melodies. He released more than 30 studio albums, recorded key projects with Lavoe, collaborated with artists such as Rubén Blades and Celia Cruz, and appeared on many Fania All Stars releases.

For more than five decades, Colón remained a major force in Latin music. His work influenced generations of artists and helped take salsa from New York neighborhoods to audiences around the world.

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