The Western motif on the double-fold album jacket -- with
Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass in costume -- signals this as another companion album to a TV special. But there is a deeper significance to this LP, for shortly after its release, a burned-out, personally troubled
Alpert disbanded the Brass and retired from music for awhile. Indeed, stretches of this record reveal a tired group and a leader whose trumpet has lost much of its old zip. Even so, as on all TJB albums, there are several gems -- the stunning shifts in texture and tempo that enliven the worn-out "Moon River," the chugging bluegrass-tinged arrangement of
Villa-Lobos' "The Little Train of the Caipira" that masquerades under the name of the title track, a haunting rendition of
the Beatles' "I'll Be Back," the fast samba treatment of "Anna."
Dave Grusin and
Shorty Rogers contribute an occasional orchestration, and
Alpert does a modest vocal turn on the lush "You Are My Life." But this time, the old sales magic was gone; the Tijuana Brass had suddenly become unhip in polarized 1969.