VOCES “Mambo Legends: The Music Never Ends” PREMIERES ON PBS AND PBS.ORG ON FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4, 2024

Los Angeles, CA/August 28, 2024 – “Mambo Legends: The Music Never Ends” introduces audiences to the New York City-based Mambo Legends Orchestra which is committed to keeping the music of the great Afro-Cuban bandleaders Machito, Tito Puente, and Tito Rodriguez alive for both long-time fans and future generations. Comprised of several former members of these legendary orchestras, The Mambo Legends provide a link to the golden era of music in New York in the early 1940s, when the Machito Orchestra fused the big band sound of popular music with the rhythms of Africa, Cuba, and Puerto Rico to create an enduring musical genre beloved around the world. Directed and edited by Mari Keiko Gonzalez and produced by Lorraine Galvis, “Mambo Legends: The Music Never Ends” premieres on the PBS series VOCES on Friday, October 4, 2024, 10:00-11:00 p.m. ET (check local listings) on PBS, PBS.org and the PBS app.

Latin music is one of music’s most diverse, influential, and exciting genres. Its roots come from traditional African music that, along with its people, made its way to Havana, New Orleans, and eventually New York City. In the 1940s and 50s, a large wave of Latinos migrated to Brooklyn, the Bronx, and East Harlem, and with them, a new sound began to take form. This new music was a fusion of traditional Cuban rhythms and popular big band arrangements, with Machito and his Afro-Cuban Orchestra at the helm.

Latin music is inherently dance music, and from 1948-1966, the Palladium Ballroom on 53rd Street in New York City was the genre’s epicenter, famous for staging legendary bands and fueling the mambo craze that swept the nation. Initially a dance studio with restrictive race policies, The Palladium eventually opened its doors to Blacks and Latinos and became home to “The Big Three”— the Tito Puente, Tito Rodríguez, and Machito orchestras. Regular patrons included Marlon Brando (often seen playing his bongos), Marlene Dietrich, Sammy Davis, Jr., and Frank Sinatra.

The Mambo Legends Orchestra is comprised of many former members of the Tito Puente Orchestra, who have come together to bring their sound to the world and expand the music they have been playing for over 40 years. The Orchestra’s musical director is Jose Madera and it is led by Johnny “Dandy” Rodriguez and Mitch Frohman, each having spent over 25 years working with Tito Puente.

While the Mambo Legends have successfully kept the sound of “The Big Three” alive and well, the reality is that many of these musicians are struggling more than ever to make a living. Lacking fair compensation during the peak of the music’s popularity, these trailblazers are often forced to hold fundraising gigs to pay for healthcare, housing, and even funerals.

Through candid interviews with orchestra members and exhilarating live performance footage, “Mambo Legends: The Music Never Ends” tells the story of the music through the musicians who helped create an enduring musical genre that remains popular around the world.

VOCES “Mambo Legends: The Music Never Ends” will stream simultaneously with broadcast and be available on all station-branded PBS platforms, including PBS.org and the PBS app, available on iOS, Android, Roku, Apple TV, Amazon Fire TV, Android TV, Samsung Smart TV, Chromecast and VIZIO.

About the Filmmaker

Mari Keiko Gonzalez (Producer/Director) began her filmmaking career with the experimental short films The Love Thang Trilogy, Target, and X-Girl. She became an award-winning editor and worked at Lorne Michaels’ Broadway Video and Sony Music Studios until their doors closed in 2007. She continued to focus on music, live performances, concerts and documentaries for many artists, including Michael Jackson, Tony Bennett, Billy Joel, Lauryn Hill, John Legend, Paul Simon, Wynton Marsalis, Parliament Funkadelic, Ziggy Marley, and Alicia Keys. In 2015, she edited the documentary Live From New York!, which looked at 40 years of comedy, music, politics and popular culture through the lens of Saturday Night Live. From 2015 to 2019, she edited the Nina Simone, Stevie Nicks, Joan Jett, NWA, Tupac, Janet Jackson and The Cure’s induction films for HBO’s Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony. She was the editor of the documentaries Apache 8Jimmy Carter Rock and Roll PresidentTom Petty Somewhere You Feel Free, and executive producer, co-writer and editor of James Brown: Say It Loud! She is currently producing and editing a film about Curtis Mayfield and is directing a film about the first female emcee MC SHA-ROCK.

About Us
Latino Public Broadcasting is the leader of the development, production, acquisition and distribution of non-commercial educational and cultural media that is representative of Latino people, or addresses issues of particular interest to Latino Americans. These programs are produced for dissemination to the public broadcasting stations and other public telecommunication entities. LPB provides a voice to the diverse Latino community on public media throughout the United States. Latino Public Broadcasting is a registered 501(c)(3), EIN: 95-4776447.
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