Herb Alpert
Born on March 31, 1937, Herb Alpert attended the University of
Southern California. He took up trumpet at the age of eight and
played in junior and full symphony orchestras. During his spell in
the Army he developed a love of jazz, but realised he had no
particular talent as a jazz musician.
In 1957 he teamed up with Lou Adler writing songs for Keen
Records. Their Wonderful World was a hit for Sam Cooke in
1960 and later for Herman's Hermits in 1965. During 1966 Alpert
was working as a session musician when he discovered his
distinctive 'double trumpet' sound.
Alpert formed A&M Records (he is the "A" in
A&M) with Jerry Moss (the "M") to promote his first
hit Lonely Bull which reached Number 6 (USA) and Number 27
(UK) in 1962. From there he had a succession of gold albums,
starting with Lonely Bull (1962), then Herb Alpert Vol 2
, South Of The Border, Whipped Cream and Other
Delights and Going Places.
Alpert ran A&M from his garage during its early days and,
as a trumpeter and bandleader, provided it with three decades of
easy listening "Americiachi" hits. In truth, there
wasn't really much of the Mexican trumpet tradition in the Tijuana
Brass sound.
Alpert's 60s work - The Lonely Bull, Whipped Cream,
A Taste of Honey - has a Dick Emery theme tune quality about
it, and the later music - Fandango, Rotation, Diamonds
(with Janet Jackson) - is as smooth as Mariachi is ragged.
But there was always very little to offend (Alpert even
insisted on re-titling Spanish Fly as Spanish Flea)
and every track was very pretty on the surface.
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