Alto saxophonist
Richie Cole has covered a lot of stylistic ground since he left the Berklee
School of Music in 1969 to join the Buddy Rich Band at age 21. Long known as a
torchbearer for bebop, Cole started referring to his style of playing as
"Alto Madness" in the 1970s, and that has been his motto ever since.
In the
course of a prolific career fast approaching the half-century mark, Cole has
included Latin jazz tunes on many recordings, but surprisingly -- given his
affinity for that style -- has never devoted an entire album to Latin jazz.
Cole has now remedied that oversight with Latin Lover, his new album for Richie
Cole Presents, which will be released on October 20. What's not
surprising is the highly original stamp Cole places on arrangements and
repertoire throughout. He's put together a wonderful and witty program of music
that, in addition to four of his own compositions (including a reprise of
"Island Breeze" from his classic 1978 outing Alto Madness), features
versions of the traditional Mexican children's song "Cielito Lindo,"
a Mariachi band staple today; "Lonely Bull," a smash hit for Herb
Alpert & the Tijuana Brass in 1962; Great American Songbook classics
"Almost Like Being in Love" and "Harlem Nocturne"; and
unexpected items such as "If I Only Had a Brain" from The Wizard of
Oz, arranged as a samba, and Neil Sedaka's 1974 pop hit, "Laughter in the
Rain." "I've
always had a passion for Latin music and Latin-flavored embellishments, so it
was time," Cole explains, though in keeping with his sense of humor he
admits the album's title is ironic. "I doubt anyone would consider me a
Valentino-type Lothario," he quips. As for some of the unconventional song
choices on the new album, they share a common denominator: "What matters
is that these tunes have great melodies and I can swing my ass off on
them." As a
teenager, Cole played in Machito's big band for two summers at the Concord
Hotel, a famed resort in New York's Catskill Mountains. "Playing with
Machito was my first real exposure to this music," he recalls. "I was
kind of lost at first. The bassist never played on the one and that took a lot
of getting used to. But eventually I got it. It was a great learning
experience."
Cole has played plenty of Latin jazz since cutting his teeth with Machito, including in an all-star festival band with Tito Puente alongside Dizzy Gillespie and Stan Getz. Coming of age on the East Coast, he was exposed to all manner of Latin sounds and has also toured Mexico numerous times (his son-in-law is from there), most recently with veteran trumpeter Luis Gasca. Bassist and producer Mark Perna is one of the "angels" who have been instrumental in facilitating Cole's artistic output since the saxophonist moved to Pittsburgh in 2014. "We really put a lot of thought into how to follow Richie's ballads album," Perna says, referring to last year's well-received Richie Cole Plays Ballads & Love Songs. Perna reassembled the simpatico cast from the Ballads album -- guitarist Eric Susoeff, who's worked with artists ranging from Dizzy Gillespie to Ivan Lins, and whose primary focus is his Latin Jazz quintet Salsamba, founded in 1984; versatile drummer Vince Taglieri, whose extensive experience includes work with big bands, theater productions, and jazz artists such as Bobby Shew and Sean Jones; and Perna himself, a veteran musician who's recorded six albums under his own leadership and has worked with Don Aliquo, Emily Remler, and Ron Affif, among many others -- with the addition of pianist Kevin Moore, a Berklee alum whose musical travels have taken him to 60 countries and back to his native Pittsburgh. "The songs on Latin Lover aren't heavily arranged," says Perna, "but they're very much tailored to Richie. He's really one of a kind." Richie Cole was born on Leap Day in 1948 in Trenton, NJ. His father, a big band enthusiast, ran the Harlem Club, a local jazz joint, and the Las Vegas-style showroom, Hubby's Inn. Cole was 10 when he started playing the saxophone. At 16, he attended a music camp directed by alto legend Phil Woods before heading for Boston's Berklee School of Music on a full scholarship from DownBeat magazine.
Cole has played plenty of Latin jazz since cutting his teeth with Machito, including in an all-star festival band with Tito Puente alongside Dizzy Gillespie and Stan Getz. Coming of age on the East Coast, he was exposed to all manner of Latin sounds and has also toured Mexico numerous times (his son-in-law is from there), most recently with veteran trumpeter Luis Gasca. Bassist and producer Mark Perna is one of the "angels" who have been instrumental in facilitating Cole's artistic output since the saxophonist moved to Pittsburgh in 2014. "We really put a lot of thought into how to follow Richie's ballads album," Perna says, referring to last year's well-received Richie Cole Plays Ballads & Love Songs. Perna reassembled the simpatico cast from the Ballads album -- guitarist Eric Susoeff, who's worked with artists ranging from Dizzy Gillespie to Ivan Lins, and whose primary focus is his Latin Jazz quintet Salsamba, founded in 1984; versatile drummer Vince Taglieri, whose extensive experience includes work with big bands, theater productions, and jazz artists such as Bobby Shew and Sean Jones; and Perna himself, a veteran musician who's recorded six albums under his own leadership and has worked with Don Aliquo, Emily Remler, and Ron Affif, among many others -- with the addition of pianist Kevin Moore, a Berklee alum whose musical travels have taken him to 60 countries and back to his native Pittsburgh. "The songs on Latin Lover aren't heavily arranged," says Perna, "but they're very much tailored to Richie. He's really one of a kind." Richie Cole was born on Leap Day in 1948 in Trenton, NJ. His father, a big band enthusiast, ran the Harlem Club, a local jazz joint, and the Las Vegas-style showroom, Hubby's Inn. Cole was 10 when he started playing the saxophone. At 16, he attended a music camp directed by alto legend Phil Woods before heading for Boston's Berklee School of Music on a full scholarship from DownBeat magazine.
After coming
up in the big bands of Buddy Rich, Lionel Hampton, and Doc Severinsen, Cole
formed his own quintet. In the early '70s, he began a long association with the
great vocalist Eddie Jefferson that lasted until Jefferson's tragic death in
1979. Over the ensuing decades, Cole has toured regularly, recorded
prolifically in myriad settings, and resided in numerous cities on both coasts
and in between. Now comfortably ensconced in Pittsburgh, he's free to pursue
his muse and unleash his creativity, Alto Madness and beyond.
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