Herb Alpert Award in the Arts for the Theater
Herb Alpert | |
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![]() Alpert in 1966 | |
Groundwork information | |
Also known as | Dore Alpert, Tito Alpert |
Born | (1935-03-31) March 31, 1935 Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
Genres |
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Occupation(south) | Musician |
Instruments |
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Years active | 1957–present |
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Associated acts |
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Website | herbalpert |
Herb Alpert (born March 31, 1935) is an American trumpeter who led Herb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass in the 1960s. During the same decade, he co-founded A&Chiliad Records with Jerry Moss. Throughout his career, Alpert has recorded 28 albums that take landed on the Billboard 200 nautical chart, v of which became No. 1 albums ; while also achieving xiv platinum albums and 15 golden albums. Alpert is the only musician to hit No. one on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 every bit both a vocaliser ("This Guy's in Love with You", 1968) and an instrumentalist ("Rise", 1979).
Alpert has reportedly sold 72 1000000 records worldwide.[ane] He has received many accolades, including a Tony Honour, and eight Grammy Awards,[ii] as well as the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. In 2006, he was inducted as into the Rock and Gyre Hall of Fame. Alpert was awarded the National Medal of Arts by Barack Obama in 2013.
Early life and career [edit]
Herb Alpert was born and raised in the Boyle Heights[3] section of Eastside Los Angeles,[4] California,[5] the son of Tillie (née Goldberg) and Louis Leib Alpert.[vi] His parents were Jewish immigrants to the U.Due south. from Radomyshl (in nowadays-day Ukraine) and Romania.[7] [8]
Alpert was born into a family unit of musicians. His begetter, although a tailor by trade, was besides a talented mandolin role player. His mother taught violin at a immature age, and his older brother, David, was a talented young drummer.[9] Herb began trumpet lessons at the age of eight and played at dances every bit a teenager. Acquiring an early on wire recorder in high school, he experimented on this crude equipment. After graduating from Fairfax High Schoolhouse in 1953, he joined the United States Army and oft performed at military ceremonies. After his service in the Army, Alpert tried his hand at acting, but eventually settled on pursuing a career in music.[ commendation needed ]
While attending the University of Southern California in the 1950s, he was a fellow member of the USC Trojan Marching Band for two years. In 1956, he appeared in the uncredited role as "Drummer on Mt. Sinai" in The Ten Commandments.[x]
In 1957 Alpert teamed upward with Rob Weerts, another burgeoning lyricist, equally a songwriter for Dandy Records. A number of songs written or co-written by Alpert during the following ii years became Peak xx hits, including "Baby Talk" by Jan and Dean and "Wonderful World" by Sam Cooke.[11] In 1960, he began his recording career as a vocalist at RCA Records nether the name of Dore Alpert.[7] In 1962, Alpert and his new business organization partner Jerry Moss formed Carnival Records with "Tell It to the Birds" being the beginning release on the Alpert & Moss label with distribution outside of Los Angeles done past Dot Records. After Carnival released its second single "Love Is Dorsum In Way" by Charlie Robinson, Alpert and Moss plant that there was prior usage of the Funfair name and renamed their characterization A&M Records.[ commendation needed ]
The Tijuana Contumely years [edit]
Alpert fix upwards a small recording studio in his garage and had been overdubbing a tune chosen "Twinkle Star", written by Sol Lake, who would eventually write many of the Contumely's original tunes. During a visit to Tijuana, Mexico, Alpert happened to hear a mariachi band while attention a bullfight. Post-obit the experience, Alpert recalled that he was inspired to observe a way to express musically what he felt while watching the wild responses of the crowd, and hearing the contumely musicians introducing each new upshot with rousing fanfare.[12] Alpert adapted the trumpet style to the melody, mixed in crowd thank you and other noises for ambience, and renamed the song "The Lonely Bull".[13]
He personally funded the production of the record as a single, and it spread through radio DJs until it caught on and became a Elevation 10 striking in the Fall of 1962. He followed up quickly with his debut album, The Lonely Balderdash by "Herb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass". Originally the Tijuana Brass was just Alpert overdubbing his own trumpet, slightly out of sync.[14] Information technology was A&M's first album (with the original release number being #101), although information technology was recorded at Conway Records. The title cut reached No. 6 on the Billboard pop nautical chart. For this anthology and subsequent releases, Alpert recorded with the group of L.A. session musicians known as The Wrecking Crew, whom he holds in high regard.[15]
By the end of 1964, because of a growing need for live appearances past the Tijuana Contumely, Alpert auditioned and hired a team of crack session men. Alpert used to tell his audiences that his group consisted of "Four lasagnas, two bagels, and an American cheese": John Pisano (electrical guitar); Lou Pagani (piano); Nick Ceroli (drums); Pat Senatore (bass guitar); Tonni Kalash (trumpet); Herb Alpert (trumpet and vocal); and Bob Edmondson (trombone). The ring debuted in 1965, and became one of the highest-paid acts then performing, having put together a consummate revue that included choreographed moves and comic routines written by Nib ("José Jiménez") Dana.
An album or ii was released each year throughout the 1960s. Alpert's band was featured in several Tv set specials, each ane usually centered on visual interpretations of the songs from their latest album—essentially an early blazon of music video later on made famous by MTV. The first Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass special, sponsored past the Vocalist Sewing Machine Visitor, aired on April 24, 1967, on CBS. Alpert's style achieved enormous popularity with the national exposure The Clark Gum Company gave to one of his recordings in 1964, a Sol Lake number titled "The Mexican Shuffle" (which was retitled "The Teaberry Shuffle" for the television advertisements).
In 1965, Alpert released ii albums, Whipped Cream & Other Delights and Going Places. Whipped Cream sold over half-dozen one thousand thousand copies in the United States. The album cover featured model Dolores Erickson wearing merely what appeared to exist whipped foam. In reality, Erickson was wearing a white blanket over which were scattered artfully placed daubs of shaving cream—real whipped cream would have melted nether the heat of the studio lights (although the cream on her finger was real). In concerts, when near to play the song, Alpert would tell the audience, "Sorry, we can't play the cover for you." The art was parodied by several groups including ane-time A&M ring Soul Asylum and by comedian Pat Cooper for his album Spaghetti Sauce and Other Delights. The singles included the title cut, "Lollipops and Roses", and "A Taste of Love". The latter won a Grammy Award for Record of the Year. Going Places produced four more singles: "Tijuana Taxi", "Castilian Flea", "Third Man Theme", and "Zorba the Greek". "Tijuana Taxi" and "Castilian Flea" would be used in the 1966 University Award-winning animated short A Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass Double Characteristic.[sixteen] [ citation needed ]
The Brass covered the Bert Kaempfert tune "Happy Trumpeter", retitling it "Magic Trumpet". Alpert'due south rendition contained a bar that coincided with a Schlitz beer tune, "When you lot're out of Schlitz, y'all're out of beer." ("The Maltese Melody" was some other Alpert embrace of a Kaempfert original.) Some other commercial use was a tune called "El Garbanzo", which was featured in Sunoco ads ("They're movin', they're movin', people in the know, they're movin' to Sunoco"). In 1967, the Tijuana Contumely performed Burt Bacharach's title cutting to the beginning pic version of Casino Royale.[17]
Many of the tracks from Whipped Cream and Going Places received a great bargain of airplay, and many were used as incidental music, such every bit on the American television game show The Dating Game, which featured "Whipped Cream", "Spanish Flea", and "Lollipops and Roses". Despite the popularity of his singles, Alpert's albums outsold and outperformed them on the charts. Alpert and the Tijuana Brass won six Grammy Awards. Fifteen of their albums won gold discs and fourteen won platinum discs. From the week ending October 16, 1965, through the week ending April 29, 1967, the group had at least one album in the Top ten, marker 81 consecutive weeks. For many of these weeks, more than than i album registered in the Summit 10. In 1966, over 13 million Alpert recordings were sold, outselling the Beatles. That aforementioned year, the Guinness Volume of World Records recognized that Alpert ready a new record past placing five albums simultaneously in the Top twenty on the Billboard chart, an accomplishment that has never been repeated. In the showtime week of Apr 1966, four of those albums were in the Top 10, matching a marker kickoff set by The Kingston Trio in 1959.
Alpert's but No. 1 unmarried during this period, and the first No. i hitting for his A&One thousand label, was a solo effort: "This Guy's in Love with You", written by Burt Bacharach and Hal David, featuring a rare song.[thirteen] [18] Alpert sang it to his commencement married woman in a 1968 CBS Television special titled Shell of the Brass. The sequence was filmed on the beach in Malibu. The song was non intended to exist released, simply subsequently it was used in the television special, allegedly thousands of telephone calls to CBS asking about information technology convinced Alpert to release it as a single, two days after the bear witness aired.[19] Although Alpert'due south song skills and range were limited, the vocal's technical demands suited him.[twenty]
Post-Contumely musical career [edit]
Alpert disbanded the Tijuana Contumely in 1969, then released another album by the group in 1971. In 1973, with some of the original Tijuana Contumely members and some new members, he formed a group chosen Herb Alpert and the T.J.B. This new version of the Contumely released ii albums in 1974 and 1975 and toured. Alpert reconvened a tertiary version of the Contumely in 1984, after being invited to perform for the Olympic Games athletes at the Los Angeles Summer Games. The invitation led to the Bullish album and tour.
In the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s, Alpert enjoyed a successful solo career. In 1979, he had his biggest instrumental hit, "Rise" (from the album of the same name), which went to No. one in October 1979 and won a Grammy Award. Information technology was later sampled in the 1997 No. 1 rap song, "Hypnotize" past Notorious B.I.G. "Rise" was written by Alpert's nephew, Randy "Badazz" Alpert and his friend Andy Armer. "Rise" made Alpert the merely creative person ever to hitting No. one on the Billboard Pop Singles chart with both a vocal piece and an instrumental piece. Some other Randy "Badazz" Alpert / Andy Armer song, "Rotation", hit No. 30 on the Billboard Popular Singles chart. The song "Route 101" off the Fandango anthology peaked at No. 37 on the Billboard Pop Singles nautical chart in August 1982.
In 1983, Alpert returned to the world of James Bail motion-picture show music, co-producing (with Sérgio Mendes) his married woman Lani Hall's rendition of the theme to Never Say Never Over again.
In 1987, Alpert branched out successfully to the R&B globe with the hit anthology, Keep Your Eye on Me, teaming up with producers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis on "Diamonds" and "Making Love in the Rain" featuring vocals by Janet Jackson and Lisa Keith.
Alpert performed "The Star-Spangled Banner" prior to Super Bowl XXII in San Diego, California in January 1988. As of 2021, it stands as the nigh recent non-vocal rendition of the national anthem at the Super Basin.
He has continued to be a guest artist for artists including Gato Barbieri, Rita Coolidge, Jim Brickman, Brian Culbertson, and David Lanz, and in 1985, Alpert performed the trumpet solo on the song "Rat in Mi Kitchen" from the album of the same name past English reggae band and A&K recording artists UB40. Apart from the reissues, the Christmas Album continues to be bachelor every year during the holiday flavour. On Sérgio Mendes' 2008 album Encanto, Alpert performed trumpet solos backing pb vocals by his second wife Lani Hall, a singer for Mendes in the 1960s, on the vocal "Dreamer". It marked the first time Alpert, Mendes, and Hall had performed together on the same song.
In 2007, Alpert and Lani Hall began performing and recording with a new ring made up of Beak Cantos on keyboards, Hussain Jiffry on bass, and Michael Shapiro on drums. Somewhen they signed with Agree Records and released a alive album in the summertime of 2009, Annihilation Goes, Alpert'south outset release of new material since 1999's Herb Alpert and Colors.[21] They followed it up with a studio album, I Feel Yous, released in February 2011. Both albums feature eclectic jazz renditions of pop classics along with a handful of original compositions. In 2013, he released Steppin' Out, which won a Grammy for Best Popular Instrumental Album.[22] Next came In The Mood (2014) and Come up Fly With Me (2015), which peaked at No. 7 on Billboard'due south Elevation Jazz Albums chart. As well, Alpert formed a new characterization chosen "Herb Alpert Presents" in club to release his catalog reissues and his new works. The showtime reissues were in Nov 2015 with the Tijuana Brass' Whipped Cream & Other Delights and Christmas Album. Reissues of most of the other Tijuana Brass albums came in September 2016, along with some other new album Human Nature, which was nominated for a 2017 Grammy Award for Best Pop Instrumental Album. In 2017, he released Music, Vol. i and a second Christmas Album chosen The Christmas Wish, which featured elaborate arrangements with symphony orchestra and choir.
In Oct 2018, Alpert released Music Volume 3: Herb Alpert Reimagines the Tijuana Brass, an anthology featuring updated versions of 12 classic TJB songs. The majority of the tracklist was culled from the grouping'south kickoff vii albums. A single from the album, Wade in the Water, was released in July 2018. Alpert's most contempo solo albums are Over the Rainbow (2019) and Take hold of the Wind (2021).
A&M Records and Almo Sounds [edit]
From 1962 through 1992 Alpert signed artists to A&Chiliad Records and produced records. He discovered the West Coast band Nosotros V. Among the notable artists he worked with personally are Chris Montez, Gino Vannelli on Crazy Life and Powerful People, The Carpenters, Sérgio Mendes and Brasil '66, Bill Medley, Lani Hall (Alpert's second and electric current wife), Liza Minnelli and Janet Jackson (featured vocalist on his 1987 hit single "Diamonds"). These working relationships allowed Alpert to place singles in the Top 10 in three unlike decades (1960s, 1970s, and 1980s).
Alpert and A&M Records partner Jerry Moss agreed in 1987 to sell A&M to PolyGram Records for a reported $500 million. Both would proceed to manage the label until 1993, when they left because of frustrations with PolyGram'southward constant pressure to force the label to fit into its corporate culture. In 1998, Alpert and Moss sued PolyGram for breach of the integrity clause, eventually settling for an additional $200 1000000 payment.[23]
Alpert and Moss then expanded their Almo Sounds music publishing visitor to produce records likewise, primarily as a vehicle for Alpert's music. Almo Sounds imitates the quondam company culture embraced by Alpert and Moss when they first started A&Chiliad.
In 2000, Alpert acquired the rights to his music from Universal Music (electric current owners of A&Thousand Records) in a legal settlement and began remastering his albums for compact disc reissue. In 2005, Shout! Factory began distributing digitally remastered versions of Alpert's A&Thou output. The reissues included all of the pre-1969 albums, 1979's Rise, and as well included a new album, Lost Treasures, consisting of unreleased material from Alpert's Tijuana Brass years. In the spring of 2006, a remixed version of the Whipped Foam anthology, entitled Whipped Foam and Other Delights: Re-Whipped was released and climbed to No. 5 on the Billboard Contemporary Jazz chart.
In 2012, Shout! Factory re-released 1982's Fandango on CD.
With the finish of Alpert's Shout Manufacturing plant contract, his releases on that label went out of print, simply to exist re-issued on the new Herb Alpert Presents characterization in 2015 and 2016. In 2020, the label released Herb Alpert Is..., a multi-CD box-set covering most of Alpert's recording career, to coincide with the release of the documentary of the same proper name.
Visual arts [edit]
Alpert has a 2d career as an abstract expressionist painter and sculptor with group and solo exhibitions effectually the United States and Europe. The sculpture exhibition "Herb Alpert: Blackness Totems", on display at ACE Gallery, Beverly Hills, February through September 2010, brought media attention to his visual work.[24] His 2013 exhibition in exhibition Santa Monica, California included both abstract paintings and big totemlike sculptures.[25]
Awards and honors [edit]
Alpert and Moss received a Grammy Trustees Accolade in 1997, for their lifetime achievements in the recording industry equally executives and the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Accolade in 2007.
In May 2000, Alpert was awarded an honorary doctorate from Berklee Higher of Music.[26]
For his contribution to the recording industry, Alpert has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6929 Hollywood Blvd in 1977. Moss likewise has a star on the Walk of Fame. Alpert and Moss were also inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on March 13, 2006, as non-performer lifetime achievers for their work at A&K. Alpert received the "El Premio Billboard" for his contributions to Latin music at the 1997 Billboard Latin Music Awards.[27]
Alpert has worked equally a Broadway theatre producer, with his production of Tony Kushner's Angels in America winning a Tony Accolade.
Alpert was awarded Society of Singers Lifetime Achievement Award past Order of Singers in 2009.[28]
Alpert was awarded i of the 2012 National Medal of Arts awards by President and Mrs. Obama on Wednesday, July 10, 2013, in the White House'southward East Room.[29]
Alpert won a Grammy Award on January 26, 2014, for Best Popular Instrumental Album for his work on Steppin' Out.
Philanthropy [edit]
The Herb Alpert Schoolhouse of Music at CalArts
In the 1980s Alpert created The Herb Alpert Foundation and the Alpert Awards in the Arts with The California Institute of the Arts (CalArts).[30] The Foundation supports youth and arts education as well every bit environmental problems and helps fund the PBS series Bill Moyers on Religion and Reason and afterward Moyers & Visitor. Alpert and his married woman donated $30 one thousand thousand to University of California, Los Angeles in 2007, to form and endow the UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music equally function of the restructured UCLA School of the Arts and Architecture. He gave $24 million, which included $15 meg from Apr 2008, to CalArts for its music curricula, and provided funding for the culture jamming activists The Yes Men.[31]
In 2012, the Foundation gave a grant of more than $5 meg to the Harlem Schoolhouse of the Arts, which allowed the schoolhouse to retire its debt, restore its endowment, and create a scholarship program for needy students; in 2013, the school's building was renamed the Herb Alpert Centre. In 2016, his foundation also made a $10.1 million donation to Los Angeles City College that will provide all music majors at the schoolhouse with a tuition-gratis instruction, beginning in fall of 2017. This was the largest souvenir to an individual community college in the history of Southern California, and the 2d-largest gift in the history of the state.[32] In 2020, Alpert bestowed an additional $9.seven one thousand thousand on the Harlem School of the Arts to upgrade its facility.[33] With his siblings he founded the Louis and Tillie Alpert Music Center in Jerusalem, which brings together both Arab and Jewish Students.[34]
Business ventures [edit]
In the late 1980s, Alpert started H. Alpert and Co., a curt-lived perfume company, which sold through college-end department stores like Nordstrom. The company launched with two scents, Heed and Listen for Men. Alpert compared perfume to music, with high and low notes.[35]
He is possessor of the Vibrato Grill Jazz in the Beverly Glen surface area of Los Angeles.
Personal life [edit]
Alpert was married to Sharon Mae Lubin from 1956 to 1971. They had two children together: girl, Eden, and son, Dore.
Since December 1973, Alpert has been married to recording creative person Lani Hall, the original atomic number 82 singer with Sérgio Mendes and Brasil '66, who went on to success as a Latin pop artist in the 1980s. They take one daughter, actress Aria Alpert.
In popular civilisation [edit]
In September, 1968 Alpert made a cameo advent on the second flavor opener of "Rowan And Martin's Express joy-In," the highest rated tv program of the year. Five days later he was referenced in the first evidence of the fourth season of Become Smart where one of the code signals between Maxwell Smart and his contact was "Herb Alpert takes trumpet lessons from Guy Lombardo." Also, a fifth-flavor episode parodied the entire group as Max and 99 sought to unmask "Herb Talbot and His Tijuana Tin can" every bit KAOS spies.
The popularity of the Tijuana Brass in the 1960s spawned many false groups. TJB member and composer of Spanish Flea, Julius Wechter, had success between 1962 and the mid 1970s with his Baja Marimba Ring, which was under contract by A&M. On the other side there were cheaply produced "drugstore records" by acts such equally the Mexicali Brass, Mariachi Brass, Pert Lapert and his Iguana Brass, and others.[ citation needed ]
In the music video for Jeff Beck's 1985 single "Ambitious," directed by Jim Yukich, which depicts an assortment of real-life celebrities and lookalikes auditioning to perform with Beck, Alpert appears at the very end, rushing to the casting managing director's tabular array and request, "Am I too tardily?"
On September 17, 2010, the TV documentary "Legends: Herb Alpert – Tijuana Brass and Other Delights" premiered on BBC4.[36]
In 2020, "Herb Alpert Is....", a documentary written and directed by John Scheinfeld, was released.[37]
Discography [edit]
Studio albums [edit]
Singles [edit]
Run across also [edit]
- 20th century contumely instrumentalists
- Herb Alpert: Music for Your Eyes documentary (2003)
- Listing of artists who reached number one on the Hot 100 (U.S.)
- List of artists who reached number one on the U.S. Dance chart
- List of Number i Dance Hits (United states)
- List of number-one hits (United States)
- List of trumpeters
Books [edit]
- Cuscuna, Michael and Ruppi, Michel. The Bluish Annotation Label: A Discography. Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut 2001.
- Larkin, Colin The Encyclopedia of Popular Music. Third edition. Macmillan, New York, Northward.Y. 1998.
- Lyman, Darryl. Great Jews in Music. J. D. Publishers, Heart Village, Due north.Y. 1986.
- Sadie, Stanley, and Hitchcock, H. Wiley (Ed.). The New Grove Dictionary of American Music. Grove'south Dictionaries of Music, New York, N.Y. 1986.
References [edit]
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- ^ "Herb Alpert and Lani Hall on CBS Sunday Morning". youtube.com. 2010. Archived from the original on November 2, 2021. Retrieved June xi, 2014.
- ^ "Herb Alpert, Tijuana Brass and Other Delights". BBC.co.u.k.. May 25, 2011. Archived from the original on Baronial 24, 2011. Retrieved November 11, 2011.
- ^ International Who'due south Who 2001 (64th ed.). 1992. ISBN9781857430813 . Retrieved November ten, 2012.
- ^ a b Piccoli, Sean (April 24, 1997). "Turning Brass into Gilded". The Dominicus Sentry. Archived from the original on September 5, 2012. Retrieved September 24, 2008.
- ^ Catherine Clifford (October 16, 2005). "Herb Alpert trumpets his totems in Bryant Park". New York Daily News . Retrieved March 23, 2008.
- ^ Stephen Vincent O'Rourke (January 2008). The Herb Alpert File. p. 2. ISBN978-0-615-17300-ix.
- ^ "The X Commandments (1956) – Full cast and crew". IMDb.com. Retrieved August 18, 2015.
- ^ "Herb Alpert – Chronology". Almo Sounds, Inc. 1996. Archived from the original on June 17, 2006.
- ^ "Herb Alpert & The Tijuana Contumely Discography at A&M Corner". A&M Corner. 1997–2006.
- ^ a b "Evidence 24 – The Music Men. [Part 2] : UNT Digital Library". Digital.library.unt.edu. June 15, 1969. Retrieved November 26, 2010.
- ^ "The Lonely Bull – Herb Alpert & The Tijuana Contumely – This Solar day in the History of Music". historyofmusic.ca . Retrieved Oct 10, 2017.
- ^ "Episode 682 - Herb Alpert / Marking & Jay Duplass". Wtfpod.com . Retrieved October 20, 2019.
- ^ "A Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass Double Feature". IMDb . Retrieved January 14, 2018.
- ^ Panek, Richard (July 28, 1991). "'Casino Royale' Is an LP Bond With a Gilt Edge". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved October 10, 2017.
- ^ "tijuanabrass.com". tijuanabrass.com. Archived from the original on May 18, 2006. Retrieved Nov 26, 2010.
- ^ "Song Facts". songfacts.com. February 14, 1958. Retrieved November 26, 2010.
- ^ Campbell, Mary. "Herb Alpert Talks Most Singing", Nashua Telegraph (New Hampshire), Associated Press, December seven, 1968, p. 3:
" ...By usual standards, I don't take a great instrument as a vocaliser. But maybe at that place is a basic truth that comes across..." - ^ "Herb Alpert/Tijuana Contumely Discography & Collector Resource Site". Tijuanabrass.com. Retrieved November 26, 2010.
- ^ "Grammys 2014: Winners list". Retrieved January 27, 2013.
- ^ "Herb Alpert'southward Vivendi Deal Has $200-One thousand thousand Encore Performance". LA Times.com. 1999.
- ^ Cheng, Scarlet. "Herb Alpert'southward sculptures, similar visual jazz", Los Angeles Times, July 25, 2010.
- ^ James C. McKinley Jr. (March 3, 2013). "A Give-and-take With: Herb Alpert The Other Delights in a Trumpeter'southward Life". The New York Times . Retrieved March 7, 2013.
- ^ "Jazz Beat: Sonny Rollins, Herb Alpert, Thelonious Monk ..." Mtv.com . Retrieved December 6, 2017.
- ^ Lannert, John (May 3, 1997). "Herb Alpert Is Trumpeted Equally "El Premio Billboard" Award-Winner". Billboard. Vol. 109, no. 18. Nielsen Company. p. LMQ-10. ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved January 25, 2015.
- ^ "Ella Laurels Special Events". February 12, 2011. Archived from the original on May xiv, 2015. Retrieved May 10, 2015.
- ^ "President Obama to Award 2012 National Medal of Arts and National Humanities Medal". whitehouse.gov. July iii, 2013. Retrieved Baronial 18, 2015 – via National Archives.
- ^ "alpertawards.org". alpertawards.org. Retrieved November 26, 2010.
- ^ "The Yes Men". San Francisco Chronicle. Oct ane, 2004.
- ^ Miranda, Carolina A. (August 25, 2016). "Herb Alpert Foundation to donate $x.1 one thousand thousand to LACC – making studies for music majors tuition-gratuitous". Los Angeles Times . Retrieved December half dozen, 2017.
- ^ James S. Russell (November eight, 2020). "With Help From Herb Alpert, Letting the Light In at the Harlem School of the Arts". The New York Times.
- ^ "The Louis and Tillie Albert Music Middle" (PDF). jerusalemfoundation.org . Retrieved May 5, 2020.
- ^ "Fashion 88 : For Herb Alpert, In that location'southward More than Than Music in the Air". LA Times. November 18, 1988.
- ^ BBC "Legends: Herb Alpert – Tijuana Brass and Other Delights" BBC Legends Serial. Retrieved September 1, 2010.
- ^ "Herb Alpert Is..." Herb Alpert Is...
- ^ "Herb Alpert Chart History - Billboard 200". Billboard . Retrieved April 2, 2021.
- ^ "Herb Alpert Chart History - Jazz Albums". Billboard . Retrieved April 2, 2021.
- ^ a b "Discographie von Herb Alpert". Offizielle Deutsche Charts (in German language). GfK Entertainment. Retrieved April ii, 2021.
- ^ "Discography Herb Alpert". Norwegian Charts. Hung Medien. Retrieved Apr 2, 2021.
- ^ a b "Herb Alpert full Official Charts History". Official Charts . Retrieved April 2, 2021.
- ^ a b c d eastward f thousand h i j chiliad l m n o "Golden & Platinum ("Alpert" search)". RIAA . Retrieved April 2, 2021.
- ^ "Herb Alpert - Rise". British Phonographic Manufacture . Retrieved April 2, 2021.
- ^ Shuster, Fred (May 8, 1996). "Herb Alpert Counting On His 'Second Wind'". The Spokesman-Review . Retrieved April 3, 2021.
- ^ Grey, Hilarie (Apr 26, 2019). "Herb Alpert: Passion Dance". JazzTimes . Retrieved April iii, 2021.
- ^ Grayness, Hilarie (Apr 26, 2019). "Herb Alpert: Colors". JazzTimes . Retrieved April 3, 2021.
- ^ Trakin, Roy (July 31, 2014). "Trumpet Groovy Herb Alpert to Release 'In the Mood' on Sept. 30". The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved April 3, 2021.
- ^ Ifeanyi, Chiliad. C. (September 21, 2015). "Exclusive: Stream Jazz Legend Herb Alpert's New Anthology "Come Fly With Me"". Fast Visitor . Retrieved April three, 2021.
- ^ Lawrence, Dave (Dec ii, 2016). "Herb Alpert talks Human Nature album and Blue Note shows on HPR's ATC". Hawaii Public Radio . Retrieved April 3, 2021.
- ^ "Herb Alpert's Latest Album Tops Billboard Jazz Chart". SCV News. August 16, 2017. Retrieved April 3, 2021.
- ^ Lawrence, Dave (December 14, 2017). "A Christmas Wish: HPR'south ATC welcomes back Herb Alpert". Hawaii Public Radio . Retrieved April 3, 2021.
- ^ McElhiney, Brian (October 4, 2018). "Herb Alpert, Lani Hall bring a taste of honey to Curve". The Bulletin . Retrieved April iii, 2021.
- ^ "Over the Rainbow: An Interview With Herb Alpert, PopMatters". PopMatters. October 17, 2019. Retrieved Apr 3, 2021.
- ^ Collar, Matt. "Grab the Wind - Herb Alpert | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic". All Music . Retrieved Jan 21, 2022.
- ^ "Herb Alpert Chart History - Hot 100". Billboard . Retrieved April 2, 2021.
- ^ "Herb Alpert Chart History - Adult Contemporary". Billboard . Retrieved April two, 2021.
- ^ "Herb Alpert Chart History - Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs". Billboard . Retrieved Apr ii, 2021.
- ^ "Discografie Herb Alpert". Ultratop Vlaanderen (in Dutch). Hung Medien. Retrieved Apr 2, 2021.
- ^ "Discographie Herb Alpert". Ultratop Wallonie (in French). Hung Medien. Retrieved April 2, 2021.
- ^ "Discografie Herb Alpert". Dutch Charts (in Dutch). Hung Medien. Retrieved April 2, 2021.
- ^ "Discography Herb Alpert". New Zealand Charts. Hung Medien. Retrieved April 2, 2021.
External links [edit]
- Official website
- Herb Alpert at IMDb
- Herb Alpert & The Tijuana Brass at IMDb
- "Herb Alpert". Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
- Herb Alpert: Artist & Musician Archived July four, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
- The Herb Alpert/Tijuana Brass discography
- Podcast Interview with Marc Maron, Feb. 2016
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herb_Alpert
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