Showing posts with label In Memoriam. Show all posts
Showing posts with label In Memoriam. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

In Memoriam: Manny Oquendo

Manny Oquendo, Latin Band Leader and Stylistic Innovator, Dies at 78



(Photo Credit: Jack Vartoogian/Front Row Photos)

From the NYTimes

Published: April 12, 2009

Manny Oquendo, the Latin band leader, timbale player and percussionist who was an expert with the típico Cuban rhythmic style and later infused it into Latin jazz, died on March 25 in the Bronx. He was 78.

The cause was complications from a kidney operation, said Andy González, his musical director of 35 years in their band, Libre.

Mr. Oquendo’s involvement with Cuban rhythms on the timbales and bongos dated back to his childhood. Born in 1931 in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, to parents from Puerto Rico, Jose Manuel Oquendo spent most of his formative years in Spanish Harlem, where he lived above Almacénes Hernández, the area’s early famed Latin record store, and later on Kelly Street in the Bronx. Also nearby on Kelly Street were Arsenio Rodríguez, the celebrated master of the tres, the Cuban guitarlike instrument, and future music stars like Joe Cuba, the Palmieri Brothers and Little Ray Romero.

Mr. Oquendo began playing a trap drum set at 15 and later took lessons, alongside the future jazz drummer Max Roach, from Sam Ulano, a well-known teacher.

By the late 1940s, he was playing with New York’s top bands along with Chano Pozo and Juan Torres, known as El Boy. When Mr. Oquendo joined Tito Puente’s orchestra as a bongo player he often used his sartorial and musical talents to attract the attention of the surging seas of dancers in places like the Palladium ballroom. In 1962, he joined Eddie Palmieri’s seminal band, La Perfecta, which challenged the big band scene with a smaller, conjunto lineup that called for fewer players and more improvisation.

Those familiar with the traditional dance hall rhythms of Cuban mambos, guarachas and rumbas could see that Mr. Oquendo’s approach to his instruments was intentionally understated.

“First of all, you shouldn’t overplay,” Mr. Oquendo said in an 1997 interview with Latin Beat magazine.

“The timbales are for providing accompaniment, backup for the group; and a good timbalero must have a strong left hand to play the tumbao and pailas or cascara,” he said, referring to different rhythmic patterns in a measure. “The timbalero must always keep the beat.”

While playing in La Perfecta, where he met Mr. González, his future musical director and a bassist, Mr. Oquendo picked up and adapted the complex carnival rhythm called Mozambique, made popular in Cuba by Pello El Afrokán, and reworked it for the timbales, introducing a hypnotic African beat to the dance halls of New York. In 1974, he and Mr. González began Libre, creating a sound outside traditional parameters.

Libre has released 12 albums, including the popular “Mejor que Nunca. ”

In a review of a 1983 concert in The New York Times, Jon Pareles called Libre a traditionalist band with infusions of modal Afro-Cuban jazz that made it progressive.

“But when Libre charges into its arrangements, which unite three trombones, Dave Valentin’s nimbly assertive flute, two singers and a sizzling rhythm section,” Mr. Pareles wrote, “those categories are lost in the beat.”

In his 1997 interview with Latin Beat, Mr. Oquendo said: “It’s important to develop the ear and get a deeper knowledge of the music, and once you become good at the instrument, you must always remember to try to be original, be yourself. You can borrow, you can take, you can even steal, but you do not imitate.”

Among Mr. Oquendo’s survivors are two sisters, Jean Vega and Lydia Crespo.

Mr. González said Libre would continue and said he was planning a tribute concert on May 30 at the Bronx Museum of the Arts for Mr. Oquendo, who played with the band until January.


Monday, February 16, 2009

Joe Cuba 1931-2009

It is with great sadness, that I share with you the passing of one of the greats, Joe Cuba. Over the weekend, I had heard that Joe Cuba had passed and wanted to get a proper obit before I shared the news. I talked to Willie over the phone about it and he mentioned that Aurora Flores (ZBD) was working on one at the request of the family, and she posted it to the Latin Jazz E Group (see below). Before we get to the Aurora's words I'd like to share a little of my experience with Joe.

I was barely 20 and it was still a couple of years till I would get heavily into classic "Salsa" and Afro Cuban roots music. I was heavily into the rap music of our day (i.e., Gangstarr, A Tribe Called Quest, Mos Def, Common, Black Moon) which I felt at that time was starting to loose steam. I used this lack of inspiration to dig deeper into the roots of the music that I loved for so long, and it was there that I discovered artists such as Marvin Gaye, The Jazz Messengers, James Brown, Jon Lucien, Fela Kuti, Miles Davis, Osibisa, Willie Bobo, Roy Ayers, The Mohawks, Jimmy Castor, Herbie Hancock, Tito Puente, Stevie Wonder, etc... While it may have seemed that I was starting to regress, it was in the music of late 60's, 70's, early 80's that I found the motivation to collect as much information as I could in as little time as I could, but it wasn't until I saw Spike Lee's "Crooklyn, that I my quest would take a resounding turn.

It was the scene in which the young protaganist, "Troy" walks into the Bed Stuy bodega to steal some snacks with her friend, that you can hear Joe Cuba's, "I'll Never Go Back to Georgia", in the background. It was right there that I must have rewinded the movie 3 or 4 times, because I couldn't get enough of the music. That was it, out of all the musical forms that I had listened to previously, it was Joe Cuba which propelled me the furthest. It is safe to say, that If I had never heard "I'll Never Go Back to Georgia", I would not only not be writing this anecdote right now, but I just as readily say that this blog would not exist as well. I don't know if Joe knew the amount of influence that he had on the people that grew up on, or heard his music, but I for one am very grateful to the man for his contribution...

Joe Cuba: The Father of New York Boogaloo has passed

By Aurora Flores

The "Father of Boogaloo," Joe Cuba, passed away on Sunday, February
15, 2009 at 4 p.m. at Mt. Sinai Hospital in New York. He was the most
popular exponent of the boogaloo, a fused Latino and R&B rhythm that
exploded onto the American top 40s charts during the turbulent 1960s &
`70s. Hits such as "Bang Bang," "Push Push," "El Pito," "Ariñañara,"
and "Sock It To Me Baby," rocked the hit parades establishing Joe Cuba
and his Sextet as the definitive sound of Latin New York during the
`60s & `70s. The Joe Cuba Sextet's unusual instrumentation featured
vibraphones replacing the traditional brass sound. His music was at
the forefront of the Nuyroican movement of New York where the children
of Puerto Rican emigrants, America's last citizens, took music,
culture, arts and politics into their own hands.

Joe Cuba's Sextet became popular in the New York Latino community
precisely because it fused a bilingual mix of Afro-Caribbean genres
blended with the popular urban rhythm & blues of its time creating a
musical marriage between the Fania and Motown sound. His was the first
musical introduction to Latin rhythms for many American aficionados.
The lyrics to Cuba's repertoire mixed Spanish and English, becoming an
important part of the emerging Nuyorican identity.

"Joe Cuba's music validated the developing Nuyorican population whose
language and music Cuba captured with his sound," underlines Giora
Breil, CEO of Emusica, the company that now owns the Fania label and
who has remastered many of the classics to a new generation of music
lovers. "He led the urban tribe," pointed Breil, "into a united front
of cultural warriors that were defining the social and political times
they lived in."

Longtime manager and promoter Hector Maisonave recalls Cuba as "an
innovator who crossed over into mainstream music at an early time. He
was the soul of El Barrio. After Joe Cuba, El Barrio is just a street
that crosses an avenue."

In 1962, Cuba recorded "To Be With You" with the vocals of Cheo
Feliciano and Jimmy Sabater whose careers he spotlighted after the
bands introductory appearance at the Stardust Ballroom prior to its
summer stint in the Catskills.

Born in 1931 in the heart of Spanish Harlem, his Puerto Rican parents
arrived in New York City in the 20s. Christened "Gilberto Miguel
Calderón," Cuba was a "doo wopper" who played for J. Panama in 1950
when he was a young 19 year old before going on to play for La
Alfarona X, where the young "congüerro/" percussionist replaced Sabu
Martinez tapped to play with Xavier Cugat.

By 1965, the Sextet got their first crossover hit with the Latino and
soul fusion of "El Pito" (I Never Go Back To Georgia), a tune Cuba
recorded against the advice of the producer later to be "broken" by a
DJ over WBLS FM in N.Y.. The Dizzy Gillespie "Never Go Back To
Georgia" chant was taken from the intro to the seminal Afro-Cuban
tune, "Manteca." Vocalist Jimmy Sabater later revealed that "none of
us had ever been to Georgia." In fact, Cuba later comically described
a conversation he had with the Governor of Georgia who called him
demanding why he would record a song whose chorus negatively derided
the still segregated Southern town. The quick thinking Joe Cuba
replied, "Georgia is the name of my girl."

In 1967, Joe Cuba's band --–with no horns– scored a "hit" in the
United States National Hit Parade List with the song "Bang Bang" - a
tune that ushered in the Latin Boogaloo era. He also had a #1 hit,
that year on the Billboard charts with the song "Sock It To Me Baby."
The band's instrumentation included congas, timbales, an occasional
bongo, bass, piano and vibraphone. "A bastard sound," is what Cuba
called it pointing to the fans, the people, as the true creators of
this music. "You don't go into a rehearsal and say `Hey, let's invent
a new sound, or dance.' They happen. The boogaloo came out of left
field. " Joe Cuba recounts in Mary Kent's book:" Salsa Talks: A
Musical History Uncovered. "It's the public that creates new dances
and different things. The audience invents, the audience relates to
what you are doing and then puts their thing into what you are
playing," pointing to other artists such as Ricardo Ray or Hector
Rivera as pioneers of the urban fused rhythm.

"I met Joe up in the Catskills in 1955," recalls nine time Grammy
Award winner Eddie Palmieri. "When I later started La Perfecta,"
Palmieri muses, "we alternated on stages with Joe. He was full of life
and had a great sense of humor, always laughing at his own jokes,"
chuckles the pianist. Palmieri pointed to Cuba's many musical
contributions underlining the power and popularity of his small band
and bilingual lyrics while providing a springboard for the harmonies
and careers of Cheo Feliciano, Willie Torres and Jimmy Sabater. "He
was Spanish Harlem personified," describes Palmieri recalling the
"take no prisoners" attitude Cuba had when it came to dealing with
those who reluctantly paid the musicians. Recalling their early
recording days with the infamous Morris Levy, Palmieri cites the
antics of Joe Cuba, Ismael Rivera and himself as the reason for Levy
selling them as a Tico package to Fania label owner, Jerry Masucci.

Funny, irreverent and with a great humor for practical jokes, Joe
Cuba, or Sonny as he was called by his closest friends, was raised in
East Harlem. Stickball being the main sport for young boys of the
neighborhood, Cuba's father organized a stickball club called the
Devils. After Cuba broke a leg, he took up playing the conga and
continued to practice between school and his free time. Eventually, he
graduated from high school and joined a band.

"He was not afraid to experiment," said David Fernandez, arranger &
musical director of Zon del Barrio who played with the legendary Cuba
when he arrived in New York in 2002.

By 1954, at the suggestion of his agent to change the band's name from
the Jose Calderon Sextet to the Joe Cuba Sextet, the newly named Joe
Cuba Sextet made their debut at the Stardust Ballroom. Charlie
Palmieri was musical director of the sextet before his untimely 1988
death from a heart attack.

Since then, the Joe Cuba Sextet and band has been a staple of concerts
and festivals that unite both Latinos, African-Americans and just
plain music lovers in venues all over the world.

In 2003, the following CDs were released:

* "Joe Cuba Sextet Vol I: Mardi Gras Music for Dancing"
* "Merengue Loco" and
* "Out of This World Cha Cha".

In 2004, Joe Cuba was named Grand Marshall of the Puerto Rican Day
Parade celebrated in Yonkers, New York. Musician Willie Villegas who
traveled with Joe for the past 15 years said, "It didn't matter where
we played around the world Joe would always turn to me and say, To My
Barrio…. With Love! " Joe Cuba is survived by his wife Maria Calderon,
sons Mitchell and Cesar, daughter Lisa, and grandchildren Nicole and
Alexis.

Condolences can be sent directly to Joe Cuba's widow: Maria Calderon @
mariacuba1@....

More information on Joe Cuba's viewing will be forthcoming within the
next few days.

###



(Joe Cuba Sextet - "Bang, Bang", Video Credit: chinorm)

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Freddie Hubbard, Trumpet Player dies at 70


Freddie was a straight ahead Jazz player but several of his tunes lent themselves perfectly to the Latin Jazz genre. In fact most LJ groups in NY count Little Sunflower in their repetoire. We pay homage to this most innovative, powerful musician. May he rest in peace