Pete Escovedo has been a major force in Latin music for since the 1970s. A composer, master percussionist, trombonist, saxophonist, vocalist, and bandleader, his versatility has resulted in success in Latin jazz and salsa, rock, funk, and Latin pop.
Escovedo began his recording career as a vocalist with
Mongo Santamaria in 1960, and gained renown as a percussionist with
Santana in the late '60s, playing with the guitarist off and on until 1980.
Escovedo and brothers
Coke and Phil formed the Latin jazz fusion outfit
Azteca, and issued 1972's Azteca and 1973's Pyramid of the Moon for
Columbia before splitting. He released his leader debut The Island in 1982, followed by Yesterday's Memories Tomorrow's Dreams in 1985. After signing to Concord, he issued
Mister E in 1982 and Latina Familia, with daughter
Sheila E. and
Tito Puente, in 1987. During the '90s he issued seminal Latin jazz titles including
Flying South (1995), and
E Street (1997). A retrospective of his work for the label titled
Whatcha Gonna Do? appeared in 2002. He recorded the universally acclaimed
Back to the Bay in 2018, and followed in 2021 with Rhythm of the Night.
Born in 1935,
Escovedo grew up in and around Oakland, California as part of a very musical family. His father sang with some Latin big bands, his mother also sang, and his brothers --
Alejandro,
Javier, Phil, and
Thomas "Coke" Escovedo, were all musicians.
Pete played the saxophone in high school and soon switched to vibes. When pianist
Ed Kelly needed a percussionist,
Escovedo found his calling. He and his younger brother, the late
Coke, both developed quickly as percussionists and became greatly in demand for gigs in Northern California. With their youngest brother Phil Escovedo playing bass, the Escovedo Brothers Latin Jazz Sextet was formed. The group broke up in 1967 when
Carlos Santana hired both
Pete and
Coke for his Latin rock group. After touring with
Santana on and off for the next decade (he has played with the
Santana band occasionally since),
Pete and
Coke founded the 14-piece Latin big band
Azteca (that also included trumpeter
Tom Harrell and
Santana guitarist
Neil Schon), recording two albums for
Columbia, Azteca in 1972 and Pyramid of the Moon in 1973. When the band grew to 24 members, it became too expensive to keep together, although the music was quite impressive.
Pete has performed in a countless number of settings including with such notables as
Herbie Hancock,
Woody Herman,
Cal Tjader (live and on the classic
Agua Dulce album),
Betty Davis,
Bill Summers, and
Tito Puente, among many others. He began employing daughter
Sheila E. while she was still a teenager during the mid-'70s before she joined
Prince's band. They recorded Solo Two for Fantasy in 1977 and worked on
Billy Cobham's Magic together.
Escovedo has also frequently led his own Latin jazz band, which sometimes includes his other children,
Juan,
Peter Michael, and Zina.
Escovedo has recorded as a leader for Fantasy (co-leading dates with
Sheila E.) and Concord (including their Crossover, Picante, and Vista subsidiaries). He and
Tito Puente appeared as co-billed collaborators with
Sheila E. on 1987's Latina Familia. Some of his most successful titles include
Flying South (1995),
E Street (1997), and
E Music (2000). After the release of the double-disc retrospective
Whatcha Gonna Do? in 2001,
Escovedo did session work with
Marion Meadows,
Ledisi, and brother
Alejandro. He opened a series of nightclubs and worked with his bands there, as well as doing session work. His own
Live! with
Sheila and sons
Peter Michael and
Juan Escovedo, as well as trombonist
Wayne Wallace and
Errol Knowles, appeared in 2003. He spent the next decade leading a large Latin jazz orchestra, playing his clubs and serving as an educator in the community.
Escovedo kicked off 2013 with his large band for
Live from Stern Grove. While his two sons are in the lineup, so are luminaries such as pianist Joe Rotondi and trumpeters Louis Fasman and Mario Gonzales. The set also includes guest performances from
Sheila E., saxophonist
Dave Koz, guitarist
Ray Obiedo, and trumpeter
Arturo Sandoval.
Escovedo toured and played residencies for most of the next three years, though he did find time to play on
Con Funk Shun's 2015 comeback album,
More Than Love.
When he did return to the studio as a leader, it was to apply his Latin jazz vision to everything from Bay area classics to vintage soul tunes. To that end, he enlisted singers such as
Sy Smith,
Howard Hewett,
Bobby Caldwell (on a salsa read of his vintage hit "What Won't You Do for Love"), and others to work on
Back to the Bay. The set entered the jazz album charts at number 25.
In September 2021,
Escovedo issued the studio set Rhythm of the Night. Produced and arranged by
Peter Michael Escovedo, it offered nine vintage soul and R&B hits, re-visioned by
Pete for performance by his 14-piece Latin Jazz Orchestra. In November, the Latin Grammys honored
Escovedo with a Lifetime Achievement Award. ~ Thom Jurek & Scott Yanow