While
Ray Barretto's congas have graced more recording sessions than virtually any other conguero of his time, he has also led some refreshingly progressive
Latin jazz bands over the decades. His records often have a more tense, more adventurously eclectic edge than those of most conventional
salsa groups, unafraid to use electronics and novel instrumental or structural combinations, driven hard by his rocksteady, endlessly flexible percussion work. This no doubt reflects
Barretto's wide range of musical interests and also the fact that he came to
Latin music from
jazz, rather than the usual vice versa route for
Latin-descended musicians.
Indeed, he has said that he learned how to play
swing-style before he came to master
Latin grooves. Puerto Rican by extraction,
Barretto took up the congas while stationed in Germany during an Army hitch. He began working with American
jazz musicians upon his return to New York, eventually replacing
Mongo Santamaria in the
Tito Puente band for four years, beginning in the late '50s.
Barretto made his debut as a leader for Riverside in 1962 and scored a crossover hit (number 17 on the pop charts) the following year on Tico with "El Watusi" (in tandem with a dance craze of the time). He tried to modernize the charanga sound with injections of brass, covering
rock and pop tunes of the time as several
Latin artists did then. However,
Barretto made his main mark in the '60s as a super session player, playing on albums by
Gene Ammons,
Cannonball Adderley,
Kenny Burrell,
Lou Donaldson,
Red Garland,
Dizzy Gillespie,
Freddie Hubbard,
Wes Montgomery,
Cal Tjader, and several other
jazz and pop albums. In moving over to the Fania label in 1967,
Barretto began to achieve recognition as one of the leading
Latin jazz artists of the day, eventually becoming music director of the Fania All-Stars. In the '70s, he was incorporating
rock and
funk influences into his music -- with only limited success -- while recording for Atlantic, and in 1981, he made a highly regarded album for CTI La Cuna, with
Puente, Joe Farrell, and
Charlie Palmieri as guest players. He became music director of the Bravisimo television program and took part in the multi-idiom, all-star, anti-apartheid Sun City recording and video in 1985. In 1992, he unveiled a new
Latin jazz sextet, New World Spirit, which made some absorbingly unpredictable albums for Concord Picante. ~ Richard S. Ginell, All Music Guide