Sunday, 6 February 2022

Pete Terrace born 6 February 1927

Pete Terrace (born February 6 , 1927 ) is a composer, arranger, vibraphonist, drummer and percussionist of Latin jazz and Afro-Cuban jazz who has made numerous Latin arrangements of titles by other composers and led several jazz groups as a leader. He was known as The King Of Latin Jazz and The King Of The Boogaloo. He is one of the oldest representatives of the New York Latin jazz movement and is considered one of the best composer-arrangers of Latin jazz. 

Born Pedro Guitierez to Puerto Rican parents in New York, he was immersed in music from an early age. His father was a disc jockey in New York and Miami, his brother Ray an accomplished drummer. At the age of 13 Pedro began his musical career as a drummer for El Sexeto Caney. He was also a drummer in the Commercial High School band before doing 18 months of military service in the US Army. On his return to civilian life, around 1947, he chose an American-sounding pseudonym Pete Terrace and became the regular drummer for Bartolo Hernandez. 

Following graduation from New York’s Julliard School Of Music in 1952, he switched to vibes and worked with Noro Morales, Tito Puente, Pupi Campo, Buddy Rich, and Josephine Baker prior to joining Joe Loco. His career as a band leader leader really started in 1956 with his signing with the record company Tico Records and the publication of his album A Night in Mambo Jazzland which contained the hit Shangri-La. George Goldner, (A&R head of Tico) who had spotted his great talent as a vibraphonist within Joe Loco's group (alias the Pete Terrace Quintet), saw in him great potential which would result into 9 consecutive albums released on this label.

In 1961, he was approached by Strand Records, distributed Decca Records to remake a cha-cha-cha album, and was listed among the first artists to sign with the label. But by 1962, the cha-cha-cha which had experienced a very big boom on the dance floor since 1954 ran out of steam and was above all a victim of the unbridled competition of the breaking wave of new musical styles. This bad experience and the very mixed success of the Strand albums  lead Terrace to change labels again and signed with Colpix Records.

                   

Taking a break from his musical career, from 1964, he decided to resume his studies with more training to develop his style and in 1966 he graduated from the prestigious Juilliard Conservatory of Music with honours and obtained his master’s degree the following year. He then signed with Sceptre Records where his musical style evolved towards what some call "Latin soul”.

1967 saw the release of the album King Of Booglaoo which was recorded live at the New York club Chez José. The international success of this disc is due to the explosion of a new dance craze at the end of 1966 in New York’s Spanish Harlem - the boogaloo, a mixture of spicy soul ingredients and the exaltation of Latin jazz.. With his new found success he founded, probably around 1969, along with Cal Tjader, his own Mio International label focused on the publication of Latin, jazz, Puerto Rican Afro-Cuban music records.

He thus attempted a comeback on the front of the musical scene by publishing a first series of very successful studio recordings, a selection made of Latin bolero, mambo and boogaloo then a compilation based very largely on (still ) the album King of the Boogaloo hoping for a vain success that could have saved his record company from bankruptcy. But this did not happen and Mio International folded during 1971.

Pete Terrace withdrew from the music scene and fell back into anonymity to become Pedro / Peter Gutierrez again and practice medicine in Puerto Rico. Although Terrace is one of the great forgotten within the salsa world,  his works are inspiration for many musicians of the nascent Salsa. I cannot find any more news about him, but if he is still alive, he will be 95 today. 

(Edited from Wikipedia translation)

5 comments:

  1. A big thank you to egroj for suggesting today’s birthday.
    I’ve placed 2 of Pete Terrace’s Somerset albums on one CD here:
    https://www.upload.ee/files/13864408/Pete_Terrace_-_King_Of_The_Boogaloo___More_.rar.html
    Pete Terrace – King Of The Boogaloo (1967 Somerset)

    1 El Pito 3:05
    2 Bang Bang 2:07
    3 You're Looking Good 4:00
    4 Boogaloo Loo 3:12
    5 Oh Yeah 2:35
    6 Do The Boogaloo 4:15
    7 No! No! No! 3:00
    8 At The Party 2:35
    9 It's Boogaloo Time 3:20
    10 D.M. Boogaloo 3:16
    11 I'm Gonna Make It 3:25
    12 Here Comes Pete 3:15
    (A remastered version of the 1967 LP)

    Recorded live at Chez José in New York, King of the Boogaloo is a fine boogaloo record, especially for a budget label. Two-thirds of the tunes are original and the rest are by the Joe Cuba Sextet and Johnny Rivera. Most are vocal in a campy, hoarse "soul" style; the singer (Terrace?) is not about to win any awards, but this is supposedly a live set full of spontaneity and joy. The initials in "D.M. Boogaloo," one of the hipper instrumentals, surely refer to David L. Miller, the house producer and director for Alshire's budget Somerset label. One last thrill is the jacket photo of Terrace plinking away at the vibes while mod '60s dancers gyrate directly in front. Note that seven of the originals also appear on the ten-track Pete Terrace LP, Latin Soul, on Mio International.(AllMusic notes)

    Pete Terrace – More From The King Of The Boogaloo (2016 Somerset)

    13 Brazil
    14 Arrivederci Roma
    15 Theme
    16 Cha Cha #1
    17 I Love Paris
    18 Mambo #1
    19 Manhattan Cha Cha Cha
    20 Hawaiian Wedding Song
    21 Mambo #2
    22 The Breeze and I
    23 Cha Cha #2
    24 Merengue

    The front cover was taken from Pete Terrace's 1967 album "King Of The Boogaloo." However, despite the title, this is not a Boogaloo album. Rather, it is a collection of Mambos and cha-cha-chas, comprised of 7 instrumentals (tracks 1, 2, 5, 7, 8, 10, and 12); and 5 vocal numbers (tracks 3, 4, 6, 9 and 11). The unmistakable voice of Latin singing legend Willie Torres leads the singing, with coro responses by Manny Roman and Graciela. This was a mid 1960s recording session by Pete Terrace in Germany that was never released.
    Willie at the age of 86 by 2016 can not remember making these recordings, but he did confirm that the voice heard was his, and that of Manny Roman and Graciela. Track no. 7 is titled "Manhattan Cha Cha" and credited to Pete Terrace and Rene Hernandez. However, the credit is wrong. They are not the songwriters. The tune is an arrangement of Rodgers and Hart tune "Manhattan." More probably, Terrace and Hernandez arranged the tune into a cha cha. (Discog notes)


    For “The Best Of Pete Terrace (circa 2009 Rareza Bootleg)” go here:

    https://www.upload.ee/files/13864423/Pete_Terrace_-_Best_Of.rar.html

    1. Playboy 1:57
    2. Broadway Mambo 2:10
    3. Mi Chína 2:48
    4. A La Lae 2:25
    5. Kilimanjaro 2:19
    6. La Negra Sanda 3:44
    7. Poinciana 2:21
    8. Gozala 2:32
    9. Pa' Vigo Me Voy 2:16
    10. Baila La Pachanga 2:08
    11. Salsa Pa' Ti 2:30
    12. Hi Hi Hi 2:38
    13. Blen Blen Blen 2:10
    14. Coco Seco 2:26
    15. Sí Sí 2:26
    16. Ponte En Vela Jose 2:06
    17. Bowery Mambo 2:22
    18. Peanut Vendor 2:17
    19. Amalia Batista 3:21
    20. Ella Sabe Cocinar 2:12
    21. Terrace Jump 2:06
    22. Greenwich Village Mambo 2:30
    23. Smoke 2:41
    24. Domitila 2:30
    25. Guaguanco en New York 2:24
    26. Masabi 2:45
    27. Arriba Chico 3:04
    28. Bombele 2:37

    This bootleg compilation from circa 2009 was remastered in 2016 by Circulo Musical and downloaded from Amazon.

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  2. While researching for today’s post I came across some vinyl downloads at yosoylasalsa blog. So a very big thank you goes to edgar for the loan of the albums and EP’s below with active links. Please note I do not have these albums but have only checked the links so please do not ask for re-ups if link is dead.

    EL REY DE LA SALSA
    https://www.mediafire.com/file/352e1wh36egr8l1/pete_terrace-El_Rey_De_La_Salsa.rar/file

    LATIN OLDIES AND BUT GOODIES
    https://www.mediafire.com/file/zcc73hd7kl6p87j/Pete_Terrace_CD_Latin_oldies_But_Goodies.rar/file

    SABROSA Y CALIENTE
    https://www.mediafire.com/file/c6i6pdfi7ed2x3a/pete_terrace_1963_Sabrosa_y_caliente%2528ORIGINAL%2529.rar/file

    EL QUINTET OF PETE TERRACE
    https://www.mediafire.com/file/7hg68jifgpbpka7/pete_terrace_-_el_quintet_de_pete_terrrace.rar/file

    EL NUEVO PETE TERRACE
    https://www.mediafire.com/file/47k6rq40dx6k445/Pete_Terrace_-_El_nuevo_Pete_Terrace.rar/file

    CHA CHA CHA IN NY
    https://www.mediafire.com/file/c1um6mu3zl9629b/Pete_Terrace_-_Cha_cha_cha_in_New_York.rar/file

    LATIN BEAT
    https://www.mediafire.com/file/3x5m5jhb5gtw4q5/pete_terrace_-_a_latin_beat.rar/file

    ONE NIGHT IN MAMBO JAZZ
    https://www.mediafire.com/file/bjb3a8u375kexfc/Pete_Terrace_%2526_His_Orchestra__-_A_night_in_mambo_jazzland.rar/file

    LE BOOGALOO (EP)
    https://mega.nz/file/cHwHCSoR#WC19MA8B8wVgZ_nb3lTYZupQsWrDOov0Ln7OoDV0DX0

    CON JOE LOCO GOING LOCO
    https://mega.nz/file/NXIwEbJJ#tsotETA2bs9Y06s9d02qG7LjWGnihcgU4ASfyiMRdjw

    BAILE LA PACHANGA LA PACHANGA
    https://mega.nz/file/JP5WzZhA#LBKYInYS6GeWmIO9XBW_R7GsUC8gv1xhEO_NjOUamTQ

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  3. buena ración de buena música, satisfecho.

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