Joe Bataan


Bataan Nitollano, also known as Joe Bataan is a Filipino and American Latin soul singer, songwriter and musician best known world-wide and in the Hispanic and Latino music scene as the "King of Latin Soul".

Early life

Bataan Nitollano was born in New York City, United States in 1942, and grew up in the 103rd Street and Lexington Avenue part of East Harlem in New York. He was the son of a Filipino father and African-American mother and he grew up in Spanish Harlem.

Career

In 1966, he formed his first band, the "Joe Bataan and the Latin Swingers". Bataan's music was influenced by two musical styles: the Latin boogaloo and African American doo-wop. Though Bataan was neither the first nor only artist to combine doo-wop-style singing with Latin rhythms, his talent for it drew the attention of Fania Records. After signing a record contract with them in 1966, Bataan released Gypsy Woman in 1967.. He would, in full, release eight original titles for Fania which included the gold-selling Riot!. These albums often mixed energetic Latin dance songs, sung in Spanish, with slower, English-language soul ballads sung by Bataan himself. As a vocalist, Bataan's fame in the Latin music scene at the time was only rivaled by Ralfi Pagan.
Disagreements over money with Fania Records head Jerry Masucci led Bataan to eventually leave the label. While still signed to Fania however, Bataan secretly started Ghetto Records, a Latin music label which got its initial funding from a local gangster, George Febo. Bataan produced several albums for other artists, including Papo Felix, Paul Ortiz and Orquesta Son and Eddie Lebron.
In 1973, he helped coin the phrase "salsoul", lending its name to his first post-Fania album. He recorded three albums for the Salsoul of Cayre brothers, and several singles, including "Rap-O Clap-O" from 1979 which became an early hip hop hit. After his 1981 album, Bataan II, he retired from music-making to spend more time with his family and ended up working as a youth counselor in one of the reformatories he himself had spent time in as a teenager.
In 2005, Bataan teamed up with producer Daniel Collás to break his long hiatus with the release of Call My Name, a well-received album recorded in New York for Spain's Vampi Soul label.
In early 2009, Bataan was featured in the Kenzo Digital-produced "beat cinematic" City of God's Son. Bataan was featured as the narrator of the story, playing the part of an older Nas reflecting upon his youth in the street with cohorts Jay-Z, Ghostface Killah, Biggie and Raekwon.
In 2013, Bataan received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the New York chapter of the Filipino American National Historical Society.
File:Dorothy Cordova Joe Bataan.jpg|thumb|Bataan with Dorothy Cordova, Ronnie Scott's, the FGO, the Summer Stage in New York and the Théatre de la Mer of Fiest'a Sète.
In 2016, Bataan performed at the FANHS National Conference in New York- where 500 conference attendees danced to his music while cruising the Hudson River on the Hornblower 'Infinity'.
In 2017, Bataan appeared in the Puerto Rican-American film "Shine", and he collaborated with Spanglish Fly, the boogaloo revival group based in New York City, to record New York Rules, written by Manuel Garcia-Orozco and Jonathan Goldman, released on the band's Ay Que Boogaloo! album by record label Chaco World Music. Singing lead vocals, Bataan includes references to his famous songs "Subway Joe" and "Rap-O Clap-O." The Huffington Post calls this recording "charming, spellbinding and irresistible." A remix of the song is included on the soundtrack to She's Gotta Have It, written and directed by Spike Lee.
In 2024, Bataan, along with other artists as Ozomatli and Puro Bandido headlined for the festival Latin Rock on the Dock in Vallejo, California.

Personal life

Bataan is married to Yvonne Bataan; their daughter is singer Asia Nitollano.

Discography

Studio albums
  • 1967: Gypsy Woman
  • 1968: Subway Joe
  • 1968: Riot!
  • 1969: Poor Boy
  • 1969: Singin' Some Soul
  • 1970: Mr. New York and the East Side Kids
  • 1972: Sweet Soul
  • 1972: The Song of... Joe Bataan compilation
  • 1972: Saint Latin's Day Massacre
  • 1973: Bataan In San Frantasia
  • 1974: Salsoul
  • 1975: Afro-Filipino
  • 1980: Mestizo includes "Rap-O Clap-O"
  • 1981: Bataan II
  • 1997: Last Album, Last Song
  • 2002: Latin Funk Brother compilation
  • 2004: The Best compilation
  • 2004: Young, Gifted & Brown compilation
  • 2005: Call My Name
  • 2006: The Message
  • 2008: Under the Streetlamps compilation
  • 2009: King of Latin Soul
  • 2016: "My Rainbow" on the album, Paris To Nueva York by Setenta
  • 2017: "New York Rules" on the album, Ay Que Boogaloo! by Spanglish Fly

    Filmography

  • Un Dia Divino
  • Driver Parrell Lines
  • Alex Paddu Love Talk
  • We Like It Like That documentary on the history of latin boogaloo
  • ''Shine''