Feel the Blues with all that Jazz
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Strona Główna Muzyka Latynoska, Francuska, Włoska Tito Puente Tito Puente - Puente Goes Jazz (1956)

Tito Puente - Puente Goes Jazz (1956)

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Tito Puente - Puente Goes Jazz (1956)

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1. What Is This Thing Called Love	3:24	
2. Tiny-Not Ghengis	2:52	
3. What Are You Doing, Honey?	    2:49	
4. Lotus Land		4:55	
5. Lucky Dog		3:25	
6. Birdland After Dark		4:40	
7. That's Puente		2:35		
8. Yesterdays		4:38	
9. Terry Cloth		4:59	
10. Tito'in		2:59

Personnel:
Tito Puente 	Composer, Leader, Percussion, Timbales, Vibraphone
William Correa 	Bongos
Allen Fields 	Sax (Alto)
Vincent Frisaura 	Trumpet
Barry Galbraith 	Guitar
Alvin Gellers 	Piano
Bernie Glow 	Trumpet
Martin Holmes 	Saxophone
Marty Holmes 	Sax (Tenor), Saxophone
Dave Kurtzer 	Sax (Baritone), Saxophone
Frank LaPinto 	Trumpet
Allen Lehrfeld 	Saxophone
Frank Lo Pinto 	Trumpet
Gene Quill 	Saxophone
Gene Rapett 	Trumpet
Robert Rodriguez 	Bass
Roberto Rodriguez 	Bass
Gerald Sanfino 	Bass
Mongo Santamaría 	Congas
Dave Schildkraut 	Sax (Alto), Saxophone
Todd Sommer 	Drums
Nick Travis 	Trumpet
Francis Williams 	Trumpet

 

Before deciding to go jazz, Mr. Puente's producers at RCA should have advised him to go take some lessons from Johnny Richards, Stan Kenton's fabulous writer-arranger of the big band Latin suite to end all big band Latin suites: Cuban Fire. Mr. Richards might have taught Mr. Puente that blaring, shrieking, ear-blasting trumpets in themselves do not make a satisfying "hot" Latin jazz session. Essential ingredients are feelings and emotions which are sorely missing from Tito Puente's jazz offering.The blaring brass in these recordings is rigid and statuesque. With TV star Doc Severinson as a trumpet soloist on this date, go figure. The reeds fare no better. Some of the reed soloists seem bent on proving that they can move faster than Speedy Gonzales on the musical scales. The only redeeming factor here is the rhythm section which is what one would expect from a timbales expert like Tito Puente. This is not putting down Tito Puente's talents as arranger. In the fifties he recorded a very good album for RCA entitled "Mucho Puente" in which he proved his mettle as arranger for Latin strings as well as tentettes and small Latin groups--with a telling effect. But as a jazzman, Mr. Puente should stick to what he does best: Salsa. ---Sammy Somekh

 

One of Tito Puente's earliest jazz-oriented dates, this set (reissued on a 1993 Bluebird CD) matches Puente (doubling on vibes and timbales) with a big band and the bongos of William Correa. The music (mostly obscure originals plus three standards) swings, and although none of the sidemen became household names, (best-known is altoist Dave Schildkraut), the musicianship is fine. Actually, more notable than the fairly conventional music are two of the song titles: "Tiny Not Ghengis (Kahn)" and "That's A Puente!" --- Scott Yanow, Rovi

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