[Congressional Record Volume 155, Number 46 (Tuesday, March 17, 2009)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages E684-E685]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING THE LIFE OF MUSIC IMPRESARIO RALPH MERCADO
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HON. CHARLES B. RANGEL
of new york
in the house of representatives
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Mr. RANGEL. Madam Speaker, I rise to ask my colleagues to pause and
remember the life of a good friend, Ralph Mercado, the legendary Latin
music executive who recently passed away on March 10, 2009. As much an
icon as the musicians that he worked with and promoted, Mercado was a
visionary innovator who helped popularize tropical music worldwide,
including New York's mixture of popular Latin rhythms know as
``salsa.''
Mercado etched his name in the history books by building a record
label whose various components (from a publishing company to a video
and film production arm) helped make and take salsa to some of the
largest stages around the world. A catalog of award-winning
international hits across three decades transformed the Latino music
industry, bringing respect not only to talented artists but also
providing young Latinos with a way to connect with their parents, their
roots and their communities.
It all started in Brooklyn on Sept. 29, 1941. The son of a Dominican
dockworker and a Puerto Rican factory worker, Mercado often commented
that he learned merengue, the typical dance from the Dominican
Republic, in the hallway of the family's fifth-floor walkup as soon as
he could walk. He first fell in love with the rhythms while at the
Palladium Nightclub when he was only 16, watching the big bands of
Machito, Tito Puente and Tito Rodriguez. As a teenager, he was famed
for producing ``waistline parties'' in apartment building basements
where a couple's admission was a penny per inch of their dates'
waistline.
Using the same concept, he then opened the 3 & 1 Club where he began
booking local Latin bands such as Eddie Palmieri and Richie Ray & Bobby
Cruz, among many others. This led to Mercado's first management,
booking, and promotions company called Showstoppers. He promoted
legendary R&B acts that included James Brown, Aretha Franklin, Gladys
Knight & the Pips, the Stylistics, the Chi-lites, starting a salsa-soul
music trend.
Mercado also continued to open many doors to up and coming artists.
He helped to expand the Fania All-Stars, promoted dances at the Cheetah
Nightclub, and presented Latin jazz at the Red Garter and, later, at
the Village Gate and other downtown venues. His partnership with Jack
Hooke, the late Tito Puente's longtime manager, helped create the Salsa
Meets Jazz Series at the Village Gate and the Latin Jazz Jam as part of
the JVC Jazz Festival.
A great judge of talent, Mercado opened RMM Management in 1972
representing Eddie
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Palmieri and Ray Barretto. He went on to manage virtually every name in
the industry, including its two biggest stars: Tito Puente and Celia
Cruz. His concerts grew more popular and by 1987 the wildly successful
``Latin Tinge'' nights at the Palladium on New York's 14th Street were
bringing 3,000 ``salseros'' to dance every Thursday night. Mercado
managed these events until 1992, when he refocused his energies on the
creation of a record label, RMM.
Mercado expanded his venture into numerous companies including RMM
Records, RMM Filmworks, and two publishing houses. With over 140
artists signed to RMM Records, the label sold millions of recordings a
year. The recipient of countless awards and proclamations, Ralph
Mercado was honored with a Lifetime Achievement Tribute by Billboard
Magazine in 1999.
Always an innovator, Ralph Mercado pioneered the presentation of
salsa music in Africa, South America, Asia, and Israel. He was one of
the first to bring Latin music concerts to such prestigious venues as
Radio City Music Hall with Julio Iglesias' New York performance;
Lincoln Center's Avery Fisher Hall; the Beacon Theater; and Madison
Square Garden.
The truth of course is that Mercado's death this week leaves a
tremendous void in the hearts of not just his family and friends but
also countless Latin music fans around the world. However, his body of
personal and professional work leaves a distinguished legacy whose
impact can be seen not just in the industry he helped create, but also
in the countless lives that his music touched. Little boys and girls
can dream of singing the songs that their parents know and love thanks
to Ralph's extraordinary commitment, energy and discipline .
So Madam Speaker, rather than mourn his passing, I hope that my
colleagues will join me in celebrating the life of Ralph Mercado, Jr.
His is an inspirational story for all Americans, one that exemplified
greatness in every single way.
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