This Day in History : [ 20 / Apr ]

Mambo King Tito Puente is born

Tito Puente the bandleader and percussionist who helped popularize Latin dance music and jazz in America is born on this day in 1923 in New York City.During a career that spanned six decades the dynamic showman nicknamed El Rey (The King) recorded over 100 albums won five Grammy Awards and was referred to by The New York Times as the most important Latin musician of the last half century upon his death in 2000.Ernest Tito Puente the son of Puerto Rican immigrants grew up in the Manhattan neighborhood then known as Spanish Harlem.As a child he learned to play various instruments including the timbales a type of drum that would later become his signature.

During World War II (1939-45) Puente served in the Navy.Following the war he studied music at the Juilliard School on the GI Bill.In the late 1940s he formed his own musical group which eventually became known as the Tito Puente Orchestra.In the 1950s Puentes career took off as his blend of dance rhythms and jazz arrangements earned him a following at nightclubs and ballrooms across New York City and beyond.

Puente who performed a variety of Latin music styles received the title King of Mambo for his role in popularizing the fast-paced rhythmic form of Cuban music.(Puente later played himself in the 1992 movie The Mambo Kings based on Oscar Hijuelos novel The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love.) In 1958 Puente released the album Dance Mania which went on to become an international best-seller.In 1963 he recorded Oye Como Va a song that would be a huge hit for rock guitarist Carlos Santana (1947-) and his band in the 1970s and was later covered by other musicians.Puente who during his career often gave several hundred performances each year continued to perform until shortly before his death at age 77 on May 31 2000 after undergoing heart surgery in New York City.

Crowds of fans waited in line for hours to attend his wake in Manhattan and the Puerto Rican government declared three days of official mourning.In its obituary for the internationally acclaimed musician The New York Times said of Puente with his distinctive cherubic mug [he] was an ebullient and wild performer who often clowned and laughed as he whapped away on his timbales.What else have I got to sell he once said when asked about this style.Im not Ricky Martin to wave my hips around and show my belly button.

I dont have a girl in front of the band singing.I need the people to see Im having a good time.