Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Coke_Escovedo> ?p ?o }
- Coke_Escovedo abstract "Joseph Thomas \"Coke\" Escovedo (April 30, 1941 – July 13, 1986) was an American percussionist. Escovedo grew up in the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area and developed an early interest in jazz and Latin music through exposure gained from his father, an aspiring big band singer, and eventually gravitated to drums and Latin percussion. Coke's older brother, fellow percussionist Pete Escovedo, recruited Escovedo for a local Latin jazz combo led by pianist Carlos Federico. The Federico combo evolved into the Escovedo Brothers Band, which also counted Pete, bassist brother, Phil Escovedo, saxophonist-flautist Mel Martin and trombonist Al Bent among its regular members. Escovedo began to gain some notoriety in the San Francisco Bay Area Latin jazz scene and worked with jazz vibraphonist Cal Tjader (some of his finest work can be found on Tjader's album Agua Dulce). Escovedo rose to even greater prominence in early 1971 when he first became a member of Santana, initially as a replacement for timbale player Jose \"Chepito\" Areas, who had been sidelined with medical issues. Escovedo was featured on Santana's Santana III album. Escovedo co-authored a hit song from that album, \"No One To Depend On\", which peaked at #36 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. Years later the song would be covered by Vitamin C as part of her 1999 hit \"Me, Myself And I\" (#36 on Top 40 Mainstream chart). While in the Santana band, Escovedo performed at many high-profile concerts, including the historic closing of the Fillmore West (appearing on the live recording and documentary film from that event). Santana drummer Michael Shrieve has credited Escovedo for showing him how to incorporate some Latin percussion figures into his drum set playing during their time together. During Carlos Santana's transition period between the original and \"New\" Santana bands, Escovedo also performed with the Carlos Santana/Buddy Miles group, appearing on the 1972 release Carlos Santana & Buddy Miles! Live!Escovedo had been, along with Jose \"Chepito\" Areas, pioneering a new style on the traditional Cuban timbales. Though drawing on the influence of the extroverted timbale showman Tito Puente, Escovedo took the explosive power of the Cuban drums even farther, adding spice to rock and soul music recordings by artists such as Boz Scaggs, Cold Blood, It's A Beautiful Day, and Malo (with whom he was a featured soloist on their debut LP), as well as to freer jazz experiments with artists such as trumpeter Luis Gasca. In early 1972 Coke, following his vision of putting together \"a band that could play anything\", formed Azteca along with his brother Pete Escovedo. The band signed to Columbia Records and released its self-titled debut album in December 1972. It reached No. 38 on the R&B chart in 1973. A second album, Pyramid of the Moon, was released in the fall of 1973. Both albums prominently featured Coke's timbale playing and some of his compositions, as leader of an all-star cast of musicians, many of whom would become prominent solo artists. Despite garnering critical acclaim and playing high-profile concert tours, the big-band Azteca lineup was difficult to sustain. Second release Pyramid of the Moon failed to chart and by 1974, Escovedo Escovedo left Azteca. In 1975 he began work on the first of his three solo albums, simply titled Coke. This 1976 solo debut featured a spare, sophisticated soul/funk/jazz/Latin blend highlighting the talents of vocalist Linda Tillery (formerly of The Loading Zone) and keyboardist-composer Herman Eberitzsch. A Top 100 R&B single, \"Make It Sweet\", resulted, along with a TV appearance on Don Kirshner's Rock Concert. Escovedo recorded two more albums: the pop-oriented Comin' at Ya! (featuring former Azteca vocalist Errol Knowles) in 1976. 1977's Disco Fantasy proved critically and commercially disappointing and became the last album of solo material he released. Escovedo continued to perform in the San Francisco Bay Area and beyond at the helm of a band that included former Malo guitarist Abel Zarate in pursuit of a new record deal which never materialized, and also continued to do session work and to tour with the likes of Santana, Herbie Hancock and his niece Sheila E, finally relocating to the Los Angeles area in the 1980s. Escovedo died at the age of 45 on July 13, 1986.".
- Coke_Escovedo activeYearsEndYear "1986".
- Coke_Escovedo activeYearsStartYear "1958".
- Coke_Escovedo associatedBand Azteca_(band).
- Coke_Escovedo associatedBand Pete_Escovedo.
- Coke_Escovedo associatedBand Santana_(band).
- Coke_Escovedo associatedMusicalArtist Azteca_(band).
- Coke_Escovedo associatedMusicalArtist Pete_Escovedo.
- Coke_Escovedo associatedMusicalArtist Santana_(band).
- Coke_Escovedo background "non_vocal_instrumentalist".
- Coke_Escovedo birthDate "1941-04-30".
- Coke_Escovedo birthPlace California.
- Coke_Escovedo birthPlace Los_Angeles.
- Coke_Escovedo birthPlace United_States.
- Coke_Escovedo birthYear "1941".
- Coke_Escovedo deathDate "1986-07-13".
- Coke_Escovedo deathPlace California.
- Coke_Escovedo deathPlace Montebello,_California.
- Coke_Escovedo deathPlace United_States.
- Coke_Escovedo deathYear "1986".
- Coke_Escovedo genre Disco.
- Coke_Escovedo genre Funk.
- Coke_Escovedo genre Jazz_fusion.
- Coke_Escovedo genre Rhythm_and_blues.
- Coke_Escovedo genre Soul_music.
- Coke_Escovedo hometown California.
- Coke_Escovedo hometown Oakland,_California.
- Coke_Escovedo hometown United_States.
- Coke_Escovedo instrument Latin_percussion.
- Coke_Escovedo occupation Percussion_instrument.
- Coke_Escovedo recordLabel Mercury_Records.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageExternalLink band.htm;.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageExternalLink ;.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageExternalLink azone.html;.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageExternalLink mscafe1.html.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageID "6223000".
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageLength "8959".
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageOutDegree "52".
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageRevisionID "702079065".
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Alejandro_Escovedo.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Azteca_(band).
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Billboard_200.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink California.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Category:1941_births.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Category:1986_deaths.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Category:20th-century_American_musicians.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Category:American_musicians_of_Mexican_descent.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Category:American_percussionists.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Category:Musicians_from_Los_Angeles,_California.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Category:Musicians_from_the_San_Francisco_Bay_Area.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Category:Santana_(band)_members.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Coke_(album).
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Comin_at_Ya!_(album).
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Disco.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Disco_Fantasy.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Escovedo_(album).
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Funk.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Herbie_Hancock.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Jazz_fusion.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Latin_percussion.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Los_Angeles.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Mercury_Records.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Montebello,_California.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Oakland,_California.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Percussion_instrument.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Pete_Escovedo.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Prince_(musician).
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Pyramid_of_the_Moon_(album).
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Rhythm_and_blues.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Santana_(1971_album).
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Santana_(band).
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Sheila_E..
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Soul_music.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink The_Dragons_(band).
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink The_Zeros_(American).
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink Hip-Hop_Albums.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLink United_States.
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLinkText "Coke Escovedo".
- Coke_Escovedo wikiPageWikiLinkText "Thomas "Coke" Escovedo".
- Coke_Escovedo associatedActs Azteca_(band).
- Coke_Escovedo associatedActs Pete_Escovedo.
- Coke_Escovedo associatedActs Santana_(band).
- Coke_Escovedo background "non_vocal_instrumentalist".
- Coke_Escovedo birthDate "1941-04-30".
- Coke_Escovedo birthName "Joseph Thomas Escovedo".
- Coke_Escovedo birthPlace "Los Angeles, California, U.S.".
- Coke_Escovedo dateOfBirth "1941-04-30".
- Coke_Escovedo dateOfDeath "1986-07-13".
- Coke_Escovedo deathDate "1986-07-13".
- Coke_Escovedo deathPlace "Montebello, California, U.S.".
- Coke_Escovedo genre Disco.
- Coke_Escovedo genre Funk.
- Coke_Escovedo genre Jazz_fusion.
- Coke_Escovedo genre Rhythm_and_blues.
- Coke_Escovedo genre Soul_music.
- Coke_Escovedo instrument "Percussions, timbales, congas, bongos, tambourine, vocals".
- Coke_Escovedo label Mercury_Records.
- Coke_Escovedo name "Coke Escovedo".
- Coke_Escovedo name "Escovedo, Coke".
- Coke_Escovedo notableInstruments Latin_percussion.