The Lonely Bull (El Solo Toro)

Album: The Lonely Bull (1962)
Charted: 22 6
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Songfacts®:

  • This 2:15 trumpet-based instrumental evokes a bullfight, with crowd noises from a bullring in Tijuana, Mexico dubbed in. Herb Alpert - the trumpet player - explained in the liner notes for the re-issue of the album:

    "In 1962 after experiencing my first bullfight in Tijuana, Mexico, I was inspired to find a way to musically express the feelings I felt while watching and listening to the wild responses of the crowd in the stands and hearing the group of brass musicians who introduced each new event with a rousing fanfare. The bullfight was gory, beautiful and sometimes troublesome to watch, but the energy in the stands was overwhelmingly exciting."
  • The song started out as an instrumental called "Twinkle Star" written by a piano player Alpert worked with named Sol Lake, who is the credited writer on "The Lonely Bull." Alpert added to that song, with the bullring sounds coming from a recording a friend made.
  • Alpert produced this song with his friend Jerry Moss, who came up with the song title. They formed their own label, A&M Records, to release the song. When it went to #6 and sold a million copies, they used the proceeds to make a full album called The Lonely Bull, also released on A&M. The label added other acts, including Chris Montez, The Sandpipers and Sergio Mendes, and went on to become one of the most successful labels of the 1970s, with a roster that included the Carpenters, Joe Cocker, Free and Cat Stevens.

    When they released "The Lonely Bull," Alpert and Moss were running the label from Alpert's garage.
  • Alpert recalled to Mojo December 2010: "I'd had a trip to Tijuana, watching the bullfights, and I tried to interpret that feeling I'd had at the fights into a sound. Of course, I was loaded on wine at the time."
  • This song is often classified as Mariachi music, but it isn't, according to Alpert. "I was just trying to do a personalized version of what I was hearing and use some other Latin instruments," he said.
  • The bullfight that inspired the song took place at the Plaze De Toros in Tijuana. Alpert was living in Los Angeles when he took a trip there with Jerry Moss to catch the action.
  • Herb Alpert used the sound he found on this track to become one of the most successful artists of the 1960s. He kept the Tijuana imagery, recording as "Herb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass." Over the next few years he had five #1 albums and finished the decade as the fourth best-selling albums artist, following Elvis Presley, The Beatles and Frank Sinatra.

Comments: 10

  • Unicorn13 from CtJust love the instrumentals!
  • Ricardo from Ct UsaThe first time I purchased the LP of Lonely Bull there was several seconds of horse hooves clopping on a stone street before the crowd noise. These sounds were hugely atmospheric and really added to the effect; when I had to rebuy the album to replace the first the hoof noise lead-in had been removed. So know that there are 2 versions of this song and it may be you can only experience the best version by owning the earliest version of the LP record version...
  • Don from Lincoln, Ne.Several members of The Wrecking Crew actually played on the record and album and would be considered The Tijuana Brass.
  • A2000 from CabaThe Lonely Bull would translate into Spanish as "El toro solitario" dunno why it's "El Solo Toro" that's not even proper Spanish and would be more like "The alone bull" or "The only bull"
  • Harv from Newington, CtThe title is far more elegant in Spanish: "El Solo Toro."
  • Loreen from Fareham, United KingdomHi steve dotstar, With you on the great sound, Herb Alpert, BUT please note: We in England do not use the phrase 'neat' (only as tidy) nor do we spell records as
    ' re-chord' I never even seen that word lol. take care all the best :)
  • Esskayess from Dallas, TxFrom this song, a mighty company grew. Sad that it is now no more.
  • Mike from Temecula, CaIf you listen with headphones, you'll hear that Alpert mixed one channel with both the background and the lead trumpet, and then pretty much isolated a fresh recording of the trumpet lead on the other channel. This apparent overdub produced the incredible presence, resonance and "bite" of the final mix.
  • Steve Dotstar from Los Angeles, CaI don't think there was a sound quite like it when it came out.....pretty neat little re-chord..
    as they say in england.
  • Lalah from Wasilla, AkIs this song supposed to represent Ferdinan the bull from the children's story about a docile bull who gets stung by a bee when the men from the city come to pick out bulls or the fight? I think Disney made a cartoon of it. This song always reminds me of that story. I think the title of Fallout Boy's "From Under the Cork Tree" references the same story.
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