If
it weren't for the genius of Specs
Powell, there might never have been an Latin Percussion Here is the story of how
he helped shape my career and the use of
percussion in all types of music.
When
I met and became friends with Specs in
1963, he was playing drums on the Ed Sullivan
show, and I was being heavily influenced
by the Latin Jazz I was hearing at the
Palladium ballroom. As my dislike for
my job grew, my desire to be a part of
the music business increased. It soon
became clear to me that the Latin music
business, as I knew it, could not provide
me with the opportunities I sought. After
confiding this to Specs, he advised me
to "get out of the dance hall and
into the recording studio" where
the real money was. Recognizing that Specs
was a shrewd and successful businessman,
as well as a consummate musician, I knew
that I had been given good advice.
Specs
also advised me to contact drummer, Bob
Rosengarden, who was making a name for himself
playing bongos
and Brazilian
percussion in the recording studios.
Bob made it clear to me that studio musicians
required improvements for their instruments
that I might be able to provide. |
Specs’s
first challenge to me was to create a bracket
for mounting bongos
on a stand. Now, I had watched the percussionists
at the Latin dance hall and knew that they
put the bongos between their legs, not on
a stand. Specs explained that often, while
playing a gig, he quickly had to switch
from vibes to bongos
and that there was no time to put the bongos
between his legs. Having the bongos
already attached to a stand with a bracket
would alleviate this problem. This made
perfect sense to me, so I set about devising
one. My efforts resulted in the creation
of the first bracket, which would enable
the bongo owner to install the bracket on
a bongo and then attach it to a stand with
a 3/8-inch diameter rod attached to it.
When I
met with Specs recently, at his home
in California, to interview him and reflect
on his rich career as a jazz drummer, he
told me that my innovation revolutionized
percussion. He may have been right. When
you are watching the percussionist with
Earth Wind and Fire or the percussionist
with Mary J. Blige playing bongos on a stand,
along with a complete percussion arsenal,
remember that it was made possible by the
vision of Specs Powell. |