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Pucho & His Latin Soul Brothers

Pucho and the Latin Soul Brothers - band/ensemble

“Ain't too many cats can get into that funk like we can get into the funk. Latin groups and jazz groups, they can do jazz, and they can do the Latin, but they can't do the funk like I can do it.”

The career of timbalero Henry "Pucho" Brown has come full circle. As leader of Pucho and his Latin Soul Brothers, the Harlem-born percussionist was a pivotal figure in the Latin boogaloo movement that fused Latin, jazz, and funk styles during the Sixties. Eight albums by Pucho and his fiery New York-based band, including a "best of" collection, were issued by Prestige Records between 1966 and ’69. As popular tastes changed in the early Seventies, however, he disbanded the Latin Soul Brothers and formed a trio that spent the next 19 years playing standards and what he calls "society Latin" music in the relative obscurity of Catskill Mountain resort hotels-which he might still be doing today if it hadn’t been for a phenomenon that arose from the British club underground known as "acid jazz."

Henry "Pucho" Brown was born Nov. 1, 1938, in Harlem. People who were born in the 1930s, '40s or '50s in New York City grew up in a vast musical culture that is lost in today's society. The radio played every type of music from classical and country to Latin and rock 'n' roll.

It opened a whole new world to the young Henry Brown. He was exposed to the big bands of Duke Ellington, Chick Webb (who first employed Ella Fitzgerald) and Count Basie. Brown accompanied his mother to the world-famous Apollo Theatre in Harlem. Watching these cats lay it down blew his mind.

But that changed when he heard via his Latino friends the fiery and swinging sounds of the mambo, rumba and guaguanco, etc. He became mesmerized with the sounds of Tito Puente, Tito Rodriguez and Machito.

Dropping out of high school, Brown worked at a series of dead-end jobs while trying to imitate his Latin musical heroes on a pair of timbales given to him by an aunt and uncle. He eventually learned to play well enough that he formed his first group, called Los Locos Diablos (The Crazy Devils), and by the age of 17 he was playing professionally with another Harlemite named Joe Panama. This eventually led to the formation of the Joe Cuba group, after Panama fired all his men and Joe Cuba snapped them up. Brown didn't last long with Cuba. He went back to Panama, which didn't last long either. This time he took over the band and renamed it Pucho and the Cha-Cha Boys.

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Recordings: As Leader | As Sideperson

Saffron &...

Cannonball Records
2012

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The Hideout

Milestone Mediaworks
2004

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Got Myself A Good Man...

Cannonball Records
2003

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Cold Shoulder

Cannonball Records
2000

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How'm I Doin'?

Cannonball Records
2000

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Caliente Con Soul

Cannonball Records
1999

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