| RAY
BARRETTO (ARTIST BIOGRAPHY)
Ray Barretto, a percussionist extraordinaire and
legend in the Salsa & latin Jazz music community has left the music
scene with his death in February 2006 at age 76.
Born of Puerto Rican descendence in Brooklyn during the depression,
he lived with his mother in East Harlem, The South Bronx and other
“boricua” districts before he joined the army, where in the latter
1940’s he heard Dizzy Gillespie’s hard bebop. The young man was
transfixed by Dizzy Gillespie - Manteca,” which featured conguero
Chano Pozo.
He started sitting in at a Munich jazz club, and after his
discharge, by the early 50’s he had bought his own Cuban Cnga drum
and was playing regularly at clubs like The Bucket of Blood. Soon
Mambo was the rage, and Barretto eventually started playing with
Tito Puente in 1957, replacing the famed Mongo Santamaria. He became
a band leader on his own by 1961, and had a big hit with his group
Charanga Moderna and their boogaloo dance craze single called “el
Watusi” in 1963 that was the first Latin record to hit the Billboard
top 20, and went Gold.
Barretto is credited by some for bringing the African Conga drum
into popular music, and had a crossover appeal that transcended the
genre boundries of mainstream music categories. He gained
recognition beyond the Puerto Rican music scene, ex. played on many
Blue Note albums. He beacme associated with the Latin label Fania in
the 1960’s and played for three decades in the popular ensemble
called the Fania All Stars alongsde Willie Colon, Ruben Blades and
others. His 1972 album, “Carnaval”, is considered a masterpiece
amongst latin Jazz afficianados with the songs “Cocinando Suave” and
his interpretation of Gershwin’s “Summertime”.
Highlights of Barretto’s run with the Fania All Stars were their
tours of spots like Panama, Puerto Rico and Zaire where they played
to 80,000 in Kinshasa before the Ali-Foremen fight. Undoubtedly
their sell out concerts at N.Y’s Yankee Stadium in 1973 & 1975 would
have to be included as well.
In 1975 and 1976, Barretto earned back-to-back Grammy nominations
for his solo albums “Barretto” (with the prize-winning song “Guarere”)
and his double “Barretto Live…Tomorrow”. By 1976, although he
had stopped performing & touring with his live salsa orchestra, he
was regularly voted Best Conga Player in music magazine annual
polls. He became interested in jazz fusion forms, and pursued this
musical passion despite it’s lack of commercial appeal. Barretto
felt restricted by the Salsa scene, it’s conventions and strict
danceable format, and did not like the tag Latin Jazz either.
He teamed with singer Celia Cruz in 1983 for the first of several
albums, finally winning a 1990 Grammy with her for their 1989 song
“Ritmo En El Corazon”. In 1992, he formed the ensemble New World
Spirit, and was inducted into the International Latin Music Hall of
Fame in 1999.
He had recently been named best drummer in the 2005 DownBeat poll,
and received the NEA’s 2006 Jazz Masters Fellowship before his
health declined. His recent albums “Taboo” (1994), “My Summertime”
(1998) and his final album 2005’s “Time Was - Time Is” all received
Grammy nominations for best Latin jazz performance.
Over the years he is said to have recorded more than 70 albums for
numerous labels including Riverside, Atlantic, EMI, CTI, Fania, Tico,
RCA Victor, Concord Picante, Prestige, Blue Note, Circular Moves,
Sunnyside and his last for O+ Music. Amongst his many musical
collaborators included Cannonball Adderly, Joe Farrell, Wes
Montgomery, Cal Tjader, Charlie Palmieri, George Benson, Lou
Donaldson, Dizzy Gillespie, José Curbelo , Adalberto Santiago, Steve
Gadd, Hector Lavoe, Yusef Lateef, Gene Ammons, Red Garland, Ray Vega,
Oscar Hernandez, Tito Gomez, and even Little Miami Steven Van Zant’s
Sun City project. At the time of his death in a New Jersey hospital,
he was in his late 70’s, and had recently had several health
setbacks including suffering asthma, compounded by heart attack,
bypass surgery, pneumonia , a tracheotomy and just enough damned
ailments to take Fuerza Gigante down.
More Barretto Links & Sample MP3’z & Interviews available at
http://lilmikesf.blogspot.com/2006/02/conga-king-ray-barretto-rip.html |