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WSWS : Arts
Review : Music
Tito Puente dead at 77
The soul of Latin music dies
By Helen Halyard
10 June 2000
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Tito Puente, best known for popularizing Latin dance music
and jazz in the United States for the past half-century, passed
away on May 30 in New York City. He was 77 years old and died
following heart surgery to correct a faulty valve.
He was born Ernest Anthony Puente, Jr. on April 20, 1923 in
New York City to parents who had just migrated from Puerto Rico.
Tito as he became known, was a pioneer of Latin jazz
and an icon of Latin dance music worldwide. This year, as part
of its Bicentennial celebration, the Library of Congress honored
him as a Living Legend. He recently won his fifth
Grammy award following the release of Mambo Birdland.
News of Puente's death shocked and saddened many among his
fans and in the music industry as a whole. World-famous musicians
along with many workers, young and old, lined the streets of New
York for seven hours on Saturday June 3 to pay their last respects.
His native island, Puerto Rico declared three days of official
mourning.
This Latin and jazz musician who tirelessly performed for many
decades is deserving of such a reaction. Many wonderful tributes
have appeared in major newspapers and magazines throughout the
country pointing out the musical achievements made in the course
of his career. He was one of the last of the big band leaders
in American music and, like Duke Ellington and Count Basie, kept
his group performing for close to 50 years out of love and dedication
to the musical art form.
Tito recorded over 120 albums in a wide variety of styles.
Known as El Rey del MamboThe King of MamboPuente's
theatrical wit, along with a perpetual grin, continued from his
days at the Palladium dance hall in New York during the 1950s
and 1960s, to the end of his life. This reviewer had the opportunity
to dance along with thousands of others at the Los Angeles Hollywood
Bowl where he regularly performed, just last summer. It appeared
at the time that Tito's enormous energy was timeless and would
keep going forever.
Tito Puente came of age as a musician during the time of the
big bandsDuke Ellington, Benny Goodman, Glen Miller and
Jimmy Dorseywhen jazz and swing were gaining ever-increasing
popularity among the American public. His neighborhood, commonly
known as Spanish Harlem, was influenced by this music, while also
retaining the island culture.
He expressed a love for music and dance at the age of 7. His
mother then scrapped together the money for piano lessons after
neighbors complained about the constant banging on pots, pans
and window frames. Best known throughout his career for playing
the timbales, he also mastered the piano, vibraharp, xylophone,
saxophone and guitar.
Tito's big break in music came during the period leading up
to and following World War II. After the main drummer from Machito's
famous big band was drafted into the military, he was recruited
to play drums and performed excellently.
After serving in the Navy during the war, Tito studied music
at the Julliard School of Music in New York under the GI Bill.
He worked briefly with other bands and then started the Tito Puente
Orchestra, which packed in audiences every weekend at the main
dance hall known as the Palladium. At that time, Mambo was the
most popular dance among black, white and Latino workers.
Tito is best known for bringing the timbales to the front of
the bandstand and playing them standing up. This created conditions
for liberating the rhythm section and also allowed Puente to demonstrate
his fancy footwork.
Tito's earliest recordings are full of optimism and life. His
best dance and Latin jazz compositions are from the 1940s, 50s
and 60s. Material composed in later years tends to suffer from
an attempt to fuse many musical influences in an effort to accommodate
changing tastes among the youth. This began to change in the 1980s
when Tito worked closely with a number of well-known jazz musicians
and arranged some wonderful tunes.
Tito made a major effort to keep Afro-Cuban music alive following
the US embargo against Cuba in the immediate aftermath of the
Cuban revolution. Best known among the Cuban singers is Celia
Cruz, who became the Queen of Mambo and would regularly perform
with Puente's orchestra.
In summing up the sentiments of many of his fans, the remarks
of Robert Farris Thompson, a professor at Yale University, are
perhaps the most poignant. He gave us all a life.... And
by us I mean not only Puerto Ricans, but mainland blacks, huge
numbers of Italians and Jews. We all loved him.
Music that is truly beautiful does have universal appeal, and
the renewed interest in Latin dance music and jazz and blues among
a younger generation today is indeed a positive one. We have Tito
Puente to thank for keeping these rhythms alive for the past 50
years.
While there are over a 100 recordings, among my favorite are:
Cuban CarnivalRecorded in 1955 and 1956
Dance Mania, Vol 1 and 2Recorded in 1958
Mambo Birdland1998
See Also:
Jazz vibraphonist
Milt Jackson dead at 76
[13 October 1999]
Mel Torme, An appreciation
[10 June 1999]
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