The Tito Puente Latin Music Series | July 8th – Aug. 5th, 2010

Groove to the Latin Beat at the Tito Puente Latin Music Series


It’s
hard to cha-cha or salsa under summer temps without a refreshing breeze
and plenty of room to dance. The Tito Puente Latin Music Series takes
place in July and August at outdoor locations across Boston, cool
backdrops for sultry experiences. The six-concert series is an
infectious soundscape of timba, mambo, bolero, Cuban, and Afrorican jazz
mixed with funk, soul, and groove music. Performers include Berklee
faculty, students, and alumni, along with world-renowned artists from
Puerto Rico, Colombia, the Dominican Republic, Venezuela, Cuba,
Argentina, Israel, and Brazil.

The Tito Puente Latin Music Series
kicks off Thursday July 8 at Mozart Park in Jamaica Plain, then moves to
O’Day Park in the South End for July 15, 22, and 29. The series takes a
turn with a City Hall Plaza extravaganza on July 31 before concluding at
the East Boston Greenway Caboose on August 5.

The free concerts
are from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. Call 617 927-1707, or visit
berklee.edu/events/summer for more information. All locations are
wheelchair accessible. The O’Day Park concerts move inside to Villa
Victoria Center for the Arts in the event of rain. All others are
canceled with no rain dates.

Berklee College of Music; Villa
Victoria Center for the Arts; Park ARTS; and the Mayor’s Office of Arts,
Tourism, and Special Events present the sixth-annual series.

July
8 – La Timbistica at Mozart Park, 10 Mozart Street, Hyde Square,
Jamaica Plain

La Timbistica is a contemporary Latin band with
some of the best young Berklee student and alumni musicians on the East
Coast. It was named 2008 Jazz Group of the Year in the collegiate
category by Down Beat magazine. Members have performed or recorded with
such prominent Latin figures as Paquito D’Rivera, Victor Manuelle, and
Kevin Ceballo. The band’s repertoire ranges from Afro-Cuban and
Brazilian classics to modern salsa, timba, and original compositions. La
Timbistica is a mainstay in the Boston music scene with regular gigs at
the Havana Club, Mojito’s Lounge, and Wally’s Jazz Café. The band
recently appeared at the Duke Ellington and Monterey jazz festivals

July
15 – Son de Madre at O’Day Park, 85 West Newton Street, Boston’s South
End

Son de Madre is a Latin band based in New York with members
from Cuba, Argentina, Israel, and the United States. The band’s
international flavor is a blend of Cuban music-son, mambo, bolero,
timba-infused with jazz, funk, and Brazilian influences. Son de Madre
and its members are on the top of the Latin music scene and have
performed or recorded with artists such as Celia Cruz, Paquito D’Rivera,
Victor Manuelle, and La India, and on the most prestigious stages in
New York’s jazz scene. The band’s second recording is on its way.

July
22 – Fausto Cuevas y su Orquesta la Moderna at O’Day Park, 85 West
Newton Street, Boston’s South End

Fausto Cuevas is currently on
tour with Stevie Wonder, and is flying to Boston from Norway for this
concert. A drummer from Brownsville, Texas, he made his way to Berklee,
where he discovered his love for percussion and studied with masters
Giovanni Hidalgo and Horacio “El Negro” Hernandez. From Boston, Cuevas
traveled to Los Angeles, where he currently resides. In addition to
performances at the famed Playboy Jazz Festival and the Blue Note in New
York, Cuevas has recorded, performed, and toured with world-renowned
artists including Julio Iglesias, Al Jarreau, Tito Nieves, Roy Hargrove,
and Britney Spears.

July 29 – William Cepeda at O’Day Park, 85
West Newton Street, Boston’s South End

Accomplished trombonist
and noted composer and arranger William Cepeda developed a unique style
that he calls Afrorican jazz-a fusion of jazz with the folk music of his
native Puerto Rico. Cepeda studied at Berklee, where he learned from
great jazz musicians about improvisation and composition. He played with
Dizzy Gillespie and Miriam Makeba. Cepeda has won awards and grants
from Meet the Composer and the American Composers Forum. He is currently
on faculty at the Brooklyn Conservatory of Music. Cepeda will perform
with a group of Berklee faculty, alumni, students, and guests.

July
31 – Caliente, a Celebration of Latin Music and Culture with Jerry
Rivera and Eguie y Su Orquesta at City Hall Plaza, One City Hall Square,
Boston

Through a special collaboration with Mayor Thomas M.
Menino’s Office of Arts, Tourism, and Special Events, the series
descends on City Hall Plaza for the remarkable Caliente, a Celebration
of Latin Music and Culture. Grammy and Latin Grammy–nominated salsa
singer Jerry Rivera was born in Humacao, Puerto Rico, and signed with
CBS Music as a teenager. By his second album, Abriendo Puertas (Opening
Doors), he was scoring No. 1 hits in Puerto Rico, the United States, and
across Latin America. His third album, Cuenta Conmigo (Count on Me),
became the biggest-selling salsa album in history, and held the No. 1
spot on the Latin American Billboard chart for three consecutive months.
Wyclef Jean sampled Rivera’s “Amores Como El Nuestro” in his 2004 song
“Amores como el nuestro, ” which would later become the worldwide
number-one hit “Hips Don’t Lie” by Wyclef and Shakira.

Berklee
professor Eguie Castrillo is from San Juan, Puerto Rico, and his Eguie y
Su Orquesta—styled after big bands that created the legendary Latin
music scene at New York’s Palladium Ballroom in the 1950s—is a
high-octane crowd pleaser.

August 5 – Gregorio Uribe y Su
Orquesta at East Boston Greenway Caboose, 144 Marginal Street, East
Boston

The wildly danceable Gregorio Uribe y Su Orquesta is a
15-piece group that harkens back to traditional Colombian bands with
large horn and rhythm sections. Directed by Berklee alumnus drummer,
composer, and arranger Uribe, the band plays his original songs and
traditional music from his native Colombia. A highlight at any concert
is when Uribe plays the same accordion that he’s had since his youth.
Uribe’s original music is influenced by his travels all over South
America—where he played guitar to support his wanderings—and the punk
and rock bands he played in as a teenager. Uribe currently lives in New
York and plays steady gigs between Boston and Miami.

Now in its
14th year, ParkARTS began as Mayor Thomas M. Menino’s initiative to
present a yearlong program of arts and culture related programs and
events in Boston’s park system. ParkARTS, the Boston Parks and
Recreation Department’s multifaceted arts program, incorporates the
visual, performing, and participatory arts. The 2010 ParkARTS performing
arts program, sponsored by Bank of America, will present concerts in
Boston neighborhood parks that range from jazz to symphonic music.

Villa
Victoria Center for the Arts is a nonprofit arts and culture center
dedicated to preserving, promoting, and celebrating Latino arts and
artists, and creating dynamic cross-cultural collaborations. Villa
Victoria Center for the Arts is a program of Inquilinous Boricuas en
Acción, a nonprofit organization that since 1968 has been a leader in
the Boston community for holistic community development and programming.
Villa Victoria Center for the Arts is located in the heart of Villa
Victoria, on West Newton Street.

The Mayor’s Office of Arts,
Tourism, and Special Events (MOATSE) is responsible for advancing the
arts, tourism, and culture in the city of Boston by providing advocacy,
support, and promotional and technical assistance, and by producing
special events and public celebrations that reflect the city’s rich
diversity.

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