Newsletter Signup
Stay informed with the
NEW Casino City Times newsletter! Related Links
Related News
|
Gaming News
Spotlight 29 celebrates Cinco de Mayo25 April 2007COACHELLA, California – (PRESS RELEASE)-- Since bursting onto the mainstream music scene during 1968's Oscar telecast, Sergio Mendes parlayed his signature fusion of jazz, funk and Latin rhythms into top 10 hits, more than 35 albums and more than four decades of music. Now, Mendes fills the air at Spotlight 29 Casino with Latin sounds on Cinco de Mayo. Mendes performs at 8 p.m. on Saturday, May 5 in the casino's Spotlight Showroom. Tickets are $60, $50, $45 and $35 and are available now at StarTicketsPlus.com or by calling (800) 585-3737, and at the Spotlight 29 Casino Gift Shop and at the Spotlight Showroom Box Office on the day of the show. Originally from Brazil, Mendes began studying music with the hopes of becoming a classical pianist. Gigs in nightclubs ignited his interest in the new dance sounds of the bossa nova and samba, which were becoming wildly popular in his home country. He began performing with U.S. jazz artists who toured Brazil, and he soon cut his first jazz album, "Dance Moderno" in 1961. He later relocated to the U.S. and cut additional albums, each met with mild success. After switching to Herb Alpert's A&M label, Mendes released the album "Sergio Mendes and Brasil '66" in 1966. The album's first single, "Mais Que Nada" shot up the pop charts and the album went platinum. Then came the 1968 Oscar telecast when he performed the Oscar-nominated "The Look of Love," and he became an overnight sensation. His cover of the song went to #4 on the charts, a rank he would later achieve with 1983's "Never Gonna Let You Go." Other Mendes hits include "Look Around," "Day Tripper," "What the World Needs Now," "Ye-Me-Le," "Wichita Lineman," "Tristeza Em Mim," "Batida Diferente" and "So Tinha de Ser Com Voce." Put the spotlight on Latin rhythms at Spotlight 29 Casino, the Coachella Valley's most exciting place to play. Spotlight 29 Casino is a business venture of the Twenty-Nine Palms Band of Mission Indians. |