Herb Alpert & the Tuijana Brass
Herb Alpert was born on March 31, 1935, Los Angeles,
California.
If only for reviving "The Third Man Theme" as an
exotica standard in the mid-1960s with his snappy version of it
on "Going Places," Herb Alpert would deserve mention in
these pages. Come to think of it, maybe that is the only reason.
Seriously, Herb Alpert's discovery of a gimmick of taping a
second trumpet part just slightly off key from the lead part
proved one of the most lucrative and influential flukes in music
history. If you were alive in the U.S. in the late 1960s, you
would have to be deaf not to be exposed to the sound of Alpert
and the Tijuana Brass. They were everywhere: on radio, on Muzak,
and on television. When linked to that milestone of the sexual
revolution, "The Dating Game," "Tijuana Taxi"
and "Spanish Flea" became lodestones of cultural
symbolism. But remember that the daters always traveled with a
chaperone and often went to such mundane places as Bakersfield.
In the same way, the TJB sound never strayed too far from the
mainstream.
Herb Alpert saved middle-of-the-road music for millions of
Americans--including my parents--just when rock and roll and soul
began to get a wee bit too threatening.
Alpert grew up in L.A. and joined the U.S. Army after high
school. He ended up in an Army band, and used his G.I. benefits
to attend the University of Southern California after he got out.
He soon dropped out of college, though, and knocked around until
he got a job with Keen Records, whose leading star was early soul
great Sam Cooke. While working at Keen, Alpert wrote
"Wonderful World" for Cooke, and it became one of
Cooke's all-time hits. Alpert also dabbled in acting during this
time, and even got a bit part in The Ten Commandments.
Alpert set up a small recording studio in his garage and was
playing around with overdubbing with a tune called "Twinkle
Star" when he happened to hear a mariachi band in Tijuana.
Alpert adopted the trumpet style to the tune and mixed in crowd
cheers and other noises to suggest a bull fight, and renamed the
tune, "The Lonely Bull." He paid out of his own pocket
to press the record as a single, and it spread through radio DJs
until it caught on and became a Top Ten hit in 1963. Alpert
formed A&M Records with Jerry Moss to back the record, and
followed up quickly with an album of "The Lonely Bull"
and other titles. It also took off and the profits allowed
A&M begin building a repertoire of artists like Chris Montez
and The Sandpipers.
By the end of 1964, a growing demand for live appearances by the
Tijuana Brass, Alpert auditioned and hired a team of crack
session men and put together a complete revue that included
choreographed moves and comic routines written by Bill
("Jose Jimenez") Dana. The band debuted in 1965 and
quickly became one of the highest-paid acts then performing.
The Tijuana Brass' records sold better than almost anything on
the market. Its first sixth albums, released in rapid succession,
racked up over 11 million copies sold in just three years.
A&M even took advance orders from stores for forthcoming
albums--to the tune of over 1 million copies for "What Now,
My Love" alone. Which explains why it's hard to find a
thrift store in America without a few copies. It's unlikely that
anyone who wanted to own a TJB album didn't get one.
Alpert released 15 albums, including several compilations, with
the group before disbanding it in 1972 to concentrate on running
A&M. Alpert continued to record on his own intermittently,
and eventually expanded his entertainment enterprise to include
radio and television productions and, in the late 1980s, to fund
the first production of the Tony Award-winning play, "Angels
in America."
The hits in the Billboard Hot 100 :
| record | position | weeks | year |
| The lonely bull | 6 | 14 weeks | 1962 |
| Marching thru Madrid | 96 | 1 week | 1963 |
| Mexican drummer man *) | 77 | 5 weeks | 1964 |
| The Mexican shuffle | 85 | 5 weeks | 1964 |
| Whipped cream | 68 | 10 weeks | 1965 |
| Taste of honey | 7 | 16 weeks | 1965 |
| 3rd man theme | 47 | 6 weeks | 1965 |
| Zorba the Greek | 11 | 12 weeks | 1965 |
| Tijuana taxi | 38 | 8 weeks | 1965 |
| What now my love | 24 | 8 weeks | 1966 |
| Spanish flea | 27 | 7 weeks | 1966 |
| The work song | 18 | 8 weeks | 1966 |
| Flamingo | 28 | 6 weeks | 1966 |
| Mame *) | 19 | 8 weeks | 1966 |
| Wade in the water | 37 | 5 weeks | 1967 |
| Casino Royale | 27 | 9 weeks | 1967 |
| The happening | 32 | 5 weeks | 1967 |
| A banda | 35 | 6 weeks | 1967 |
| Carmen | 51 | 6 weeks | 1968 |
| Cabaret | 72 | 6 weeks | 1968 |
| This guy's in love with you *) | 1 | 14 weeks | 1968 |
| To wait for love *) | 51 | 6 weeks | 1968 |
| My favorite things | 45 | 6 weeks | 1968 |
| Zazueira *) | 78 | 5 weeks | 1969 |
| Without her *) | 63 | 6 weeks | 1969 |
| Jerusalem | 74 | 4 weeks | 1970 |
| Last tango in Paris | 77 | 8 weeks | 1973 |
| Fox hunt | 84 | 6 weeks | 1974 |
| Rise | 1 | 25 weeks | 1979 |
| Rotation | 30 | 13 weeks | 1979 |
| Beyond | 50 | 8 weeks | 1980 |
| Magic man | 79 | 5 weeks | 1981 |
| Route 101 | 37 | 10 weeks | 1982 |
| Garden party | 81 | 4 weeks | 1983 |
| Red hot | 77 | 5 weeks | 1983 |
| Bullish | 90 | 2 weeks | 1984 |
*) = not instrumental hits
Recordings
The Lonely Bull, A&M Records SP 4101
Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass, Vol. 2, A&M Records SP
4103
South of the Border, A&M Records SP 4108
Whipped Cream and Other Delights, A&M Records SP 4110
Going Places, A&M Records SP 4112
What Now, My Love?, A&M Records SP 4114
S.R.O., A&M Records SP 4119
Sounds Like, A&M Records SP 4124
Ninth, A&M Records SP 4134
Best of the Brass, A&M Records SP 4146
Christmas Album, A&M Records SP 4166
Warm, A&M Records SP 4190
Brass Are Comin', A&M Records SP 4228
Greatest Hits, A&M Records SP 4245
Summertime, A&M Records SP 4314
Solid Brass, A&M Records SP 4341
![]() |