Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pete Rodriguez (April 16, 1934– March 07, 2024) was an American pianist and bandleader born in The Bronx, New York, to Puerto Rican parents. Biography.
Tony Pabon and Manny Rodriguez originally wrote "I Like It Like That" in 1967. Tony Pabon sang the vocals for the song, while the instrumentals were performed by Pete Rodriguez Orchestra. The recording was engineered by Fred Weinberg at National Recording Studios in New York City and produced by Roulette Records producer Morrie Pelsman, also ...
Pedro Juan Rodríguez Ferrer (31 January 1933 – 1 December 2000), [2] better known as Pete "El Conde" Rodríguez, was a salsa singer born in Barrio Cantera, [3] Ponce, Puerto Rico. [4] His son, also named Pete Rodriguez, is also a salsa and jazz musician. [5] His daughter, Cita Rodriguez, is also an accomplished salsa singer.
Pete Rodriguez (born August 2, 1969) plays jazz trumpet and is a composer, vocalist, and percussionist. The reviewer Brian Zimmerman, in a review of the El Conde Negro album, wrote in 2015 that "Rodriguez is not only an attentive student of the Latin jazz tradition, but also one of the talented young artists who will usher it into the future."
"I Like It Like That" (Pete Rodriguez song), a 1967 song first sung by Pete Rodriguez, subsequently rendered by the Blackout All-Stars and other artists "I Like It Like That" (Per Gessle song) (2006) "I Like It Like That" (Hot Chelle Rae song) (2011) "I Like It Like That", a 1965 Van Morrison song by Them on The Angry Young Them
Pete Rodríguez's "I Like It like That" [1] was a famous boogaloo song. Except for the name, the dance is unrelated to the boogaloo street dance from Oakland, California and the electric boogaloo , a style of dance which developed decades later under the influence of funk music and hip-hop dance .
Discover what the planets are predicting today for your health, love life, career and more with your pisces Daily Horoscope from AOL Horoscopes.
Pete Rodriguez (July 25, 1940 – November 30, 2014) was an American football coach of Mexican American descent. [1] [2] College coaching career.