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Catero spent his early childhood with his adoptive parents Fred Catero Sr. and Rosa Perez in Jacksonville, FL. At the age of 7, his adoptive mother moved with him to New York, where they lived in the Spanish Harlem (El Barrio) neighborhood. [8] Early on, Catero showed a passion for music and an interest in sound recording and preservation.
Produced by Fred Catero, Jorge Santana and Pablo Tellez; Recorded at Wally Heider Studio, San Francisco; Chaos control: Douglas Tracy; Recording and remix engineer: Fred Catero; Synthesizer recorded at Different Fur Studio, San Francisco; Engineer: John Vieira; Art direction, design and photography: Rudy Rodriguez; Cover art: Carlos Venegas and ...
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The song "My Days Are Numbered" was included as Side Two track one on the album and introduced BST to a much wider audience. The album was re-released in the UK in 1973, entitled "The First Album" on Embassy Records, a subsidiary of Columbia Records (catalogue number EMB 31028) with an identical track listing and the same picture on the front ...
In 1971 Mainline recorded a second studio album, "Canada Our Home and Native Land" in San Francisco. [citation needed] The album featured horn arrangements on some tracks and was engineered by Fred Catero, who worked on many albums by top artists, including Bob Dylan, Al Kooper and Santana. The album had more of a production sheen than the ...
From 1969 through 1973, producer David Rubinson and engineer Fred Catero utilized Pacific Recording for numerous Fillmore Records and San Francisco Records projects. Curcio left Pacific in 1978 and founded Arrow Recording Studios. He would go on to found Music America Studios in 1982, where he produced Metallica's debut studio album, Kill 'Em ...
"Samba Pa Ti" is one of the group's most popular and acclaimed songs, and it is still in the band's tour set lists. [8] In 1974 the song was covered by Bruno Battisti D'Amario and Edda Dell'Orso for the album Samba para ti. [9] Japanese guitarist Masayoshi Takanaka would cover the song on his 1978
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