Passion. It is the
force which drives all human beings
to achieve, to strive and to make
their dreams come true.
The story of LP
Music Group is the passion of one
man. A passion which drove him
to create, innovate and unmistakably
change the face of percussion forever.
In 1956 a young mechanical engineer
and avid photographer from the Bronx
named Martin Cohen happened upon New
York's famous Birdland jazz club. He
walked in and was greeted by the sounds
of Cal Tjader's hot Latin jazz. Cohen
was so taken by the infectious music
that he became a regular at the Monday
night jam sessions, which were headed
by flutist Herbie Mann with percussionists
like Candido and Jose Mangual. It was
Mangual in particular who was an inspiration
to Cohen.
"Up until then, there was no role
model that exemplified greatness," Cohen
said. "That's what I saw in Mangual,
and that's what I wanted to be, somebody
who had that mastery of something."
Cohen became a student of the 1960's
Latin scene, and soon wanted his own
set of bongos. It was then that he
learned about the politics of Latin
percussion.
Because of the government-imposed
trade embargo against Cuba, finding
good instruments in the United States
was a difficult prospect at best. This
obstacle did not dull the passion of
young Cohen, however, and he put his
engineering skills to use and created
his own set of bongos. Using photos
of Johnny Pacheco's bongos, he created
his first prototype. Of course, practice
makes perfect, and this first attempt
was not exactly flawless.
"This was the beginning of my learning," Cohen
said. "I knew nothing about machining
or about wood or metal working. The
first wood bongo shell was cut on Friday,
and by Monday it was a quarter of an
inch smaller. I didn't realize it was
wet wood which was cut and that it
had to dry first."
Undeterred by this initial setback,
Cohen was soon delivering bongos and
cowbells to musicians in brown paper
bags, soliciting feedback and using
the Latin nightclubs as his research
and development labs. Cohen's self-described "love
affair" with Latin music led to a tradition
still in place at LP; the needs of
performing musicians are placed ahead
of everything else.
Eventually Cohen received a contract
to make cowbells for Rogers Drums and
continued to sell bongos on consignment.
He made a set of claves for Charlie
Palmieri and he designed and sound
effects for Carroll Sound.
The influence of two prominent television
drummers helped to widen Cohen's focus
from the dance hall to the recording
studio. Cohen met Specs Powell, the
drummer with the Ed Sullivan Show and
staff musician for CBS. Cohen recalls
Powell telling him "to get out of the
Latin dance halls and into the studios
where the real money was."
Powell asked Cohen to make him a pair
of bongos and also to create a bongo
stand so Powell could play them standing
up. Cohen fashioned a mounting system
without having to drill into the shell
of the drum, thereby keeping the tone
pure.
Powell was happy with Cohen's work,
and introduced him to Bob Rosegarden,
who was then the drummer for The Tonight
Show. Rosegarden asked Cohen to create
an instrument that would replicate
the sound of the traditional horse
jawbone with rattling teeth. Cohen's
modern-day version of the jawbone,
called the Vibra-Slap®, became
the company's first patent.
Rosegarden also asked Cohen to make
a more sturdy cabasa, as the traditional
instruments were made from coconut
shells covered in a fragile wire lattice.
Using a textured material from the
wall of an elevator rolled onto a cylinder,
Cohen wrapped a bead chain around it
and then attached a handle. This became
the LP Afuche®/Cabasa, the company's
most successful patent.
Innovation has always been a part
of the LP story. In building his first
patented instruments, Cohen used durable
modern materials to replace rare and
fragile instruments without sacrificing
sound quality. Cohen was also one of
the first manufacturers to build fiberglass
congas, which gained favor with Latin
dance bands because of their greater
volume.
Cohen's passion and sincerity helped
him win acceptance in what was then
a tightly insular Latin community.
As a result, he became friends with
many of the players he created instruments
for and with. Carlos "Patato" Valdez
is a lifelong friend of the Cohen family,
and was a frequent visitor to their
household. "The King" Tito Puente,
another friend and endorser, recalls
Cohen trying to learn the mambo at
the Palladium.
"Martin was a lousy dancer," Puente
laughed. "But he was always consulting
with us, trying to do the right thing,
to get the authentic sound but with
modern engineering. He never got 'commercialized'." Puente
and Valdez's willingness to work with
Cohen have resulted in superior quality
LP product lines that bear their names,
as well as their stamps of approval.
Cohen's hard work and determination
paid off in August of 1964. Cohen worked
his last day for someone other than
himself, and officially started Latin
Percussion, Inc. Cohen's passion was
now his own company.
However, the early days were not easy.
Cohen's first workshop was his basement,
with gas-welding taking place in a
detatched and unheated garage. Early
customers would walk into workshop
and find Cohen wearting two coats and
a sweatshirt while welding conga hardware.
He also served as the sole photographer,
copywriter, market researcher, salesman
and janitor.
Cohen's business and family life began
to overlap almost completely. His wife,
Marilyn, spent time with the export
division and still works for the company
as a consultant. Cohen's daughter Andrea,
who taught herself typing at 8 to help
prepare shipping labels, is now one
of the company's managers.
From the beginning, LP has let those
who play their instruments do most
of the talking. The company's first
endorser was Afro-Cuban and jazz drummer
Willie Bobo. Today, LP has over 500
endorsers, a list which reads as a
veritable "who's who" of the music
world. Musicians like Tito Puente,
Marc Quiñones, Alex Acuña, "Patato" Valdez,
Carlos Santana, Giovanni Hildago, Armando
Peraza and many more all use LP products.
Because they are the best, their equipment
must be the best as well.
The company that started in the Cohen
garage now has 80 employees at its
corporate headquarters, including a
staff of research, design and product
developers that keep an ongoing stream
of new products coming out. In addition,
over 250 people are employed at the
manufacturing facility in Thailand.
What started as a small family operation
has grown to become LP Music Group,
the world's largest producer of hand
percussion instruments.
Cohen's commitment from the beginning
has been combining authenticity of
sound with strong modern design. Today
Latin percussion are played by professional
musicians and people from all walks
of life. Cohen himself still travels
to clubs around the world, taking photographs
and talking to musicians, gathering
feedback from those who use LP instruments.
It's been a long time since you had
to violate embargoes to get a good
pair of congas. Martin Cohen and the
LP Music Group can take substantial
credit for that. |