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Joe Bataan (1979)
"Clap your hands everybody, everybody clap your hands"
(Joe Bataan "Rap-O Clap-O" (1979)


Despite what most people thought when Joe Bataan topped the European charts with "Rap-O Clap-O" in 1980, he wasn't a new kid on the block, nor was "Rap-O Clap-O" his first chart buster -or a very good representation of the music he was known for among his longtime fans in America. In fact, Joe had been recording for well over a decade (his first U.S. hit was "Crystal Blue Persuasion" on the Uptite label in 1969) and he was known as the "The King of Latin R&B".

Mestizo (LP, 1980)Singer/pianist/songwriter/producer Joe Bataan was born Peter Nitollano in 1942 of African-American and Filipino parents and grew up in El Barrio (Spanish Harlem), New York. As a teenager, he was caught riding in a stolen car and was sentenced to five years in prison. When he got out of jail in 1961, he decided to dedicate himself to music and taught himself to play the piano. By the early seventies, Joe was signed to Mericana, a label owned by brothers Joe, Ken and Stanley Cayre, who were important distributors of Latin and Salsa records. In 1973-74, Joe released "Salsoul", an album that would lend its name to the Dance-music label the Cayre's were just starting up at that time; a project which Joe also helped fund.

Joe Bataan II (LP, 1981)Joe's first LP on Salsoul came out in 1975. Suitably entitled "Afro-Filipino", it gave him his biggest hit to date (at least on the American R&B charts); an instrumental version of Gil Scott-Heron's "The Bottle", which Joe subtitled "La Botella". In British Dance circles, Joe is also remembered as the producer and pianist on fellow New Yorker and sax player Laso's instrumental cover of Stevie Wonder's "Another Star"; a cult Disco track which was pulled from a 1977 LP on MCA. To the rest of Europe, however, Joe was the man who delivered "Rap-O Clap-O", which probably was the very first Rap record a lot of people on this side of the Atlantic ever heard. Issued in November, 1979, just some four weeks after Sugarhill Gang's "Rapper's Delight" and Fatback's "King Tim III", "Rap-O Clap-O" sounds as infectious today as it did back then. Strangely enough, it was only an underground hit in the U.S.A., but the minute it was issued in Europe, it literally raced up the charts. It went all the way to #1 in Belgium, #2 in Holland and sold Gold in both countries. The subsequent album "Mestizo", named after Joe's backing band, landed on the shelves a year later. Shortly thereafter, Joe embarked on a tour that took him to France, Italy and Germany. Included on that LP were also several other outstanding Disco-Rap-Funk cuts like "Sadie (She Smokes)" and "Rap-O Dance-O". The 1981 follow-up "Joe Bataan II" failed to produce another worldwide smash. "Ling Ching Tong", was the only track where Joe rapped, instead the album marked a return to the style that had originally earned him the "King of Latin R&B" title.

According to an article in the Philadelphia Daily News in October 1997, Joe left the business in the eighties and concentrated on raising his family. But in 1995, Joe was lured back into performing after receiving a standing ovation at a benefit show held at Hotos College in the Bronx. Joe's band -which included his wife of twenty-six years, Yvonne, on vocals- went on to play in South America, California and New York City. Joe has also returned to recording, issuing at least three albums "Salsoul" ('95), "Joe Bataan 2" ('96) and "Last, Album, Last Song" (Bataan Music, '97). He works as a counselor for juveniles in New York state's Department of Justice and The Philadelphia Daily News reported that Joe was happy to see that something he had been doing for thirty years was "starting to catch on with other groups."


   
Suggested Joe Bataan CD listening
   
Salsoul - - 20-1017-2 (U.S.)
II - - 20-1025-2 (U.S.)
Joe Bataan* 1996 CNR 530 01 06
*Note that this CD does not contain or "The Bottle" and only a 4 minutes Spanish (!) version of "Rap-O Clap-O". "The Bottle" is however included on the 2-CD compilation Salsoul Classics Vol. 1 (CNR 530 01 07). On the CNR Joe Bataan compilation above, you'll find cult classics like "Aftershower Funk" and "Latin Strut", taken from Joe's 1973 album entitled "Salsoul", which was released on the Mericana label.
  

Joe Bataan LP Discography

  
Salsoul 1973/1974 Mericana XMS 124
Afro-Filipino 1975 Salsoul -
Mestizo 1980 Salsoul SA8534
II 1981 Salsoul SA8549

 

   
 


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© Maria Granditsky February 1997.
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