Afro-Cuban All Stars is a Cuban band led by Juan de Marcos González . Their music is a mix of all the styles of Cuban music , including bolero , chachachá , salsa , son montuno , timba , guajira , danzón , rumba and abakua .
82-685: They are known internationally for their 1997 album A Toda Cuba le Gusta , which was recorded at the Buena Vista Social Club sessions. Members have included Rubén González , Orlando "Cachaíto" López , Ibrahim Ferrer , Raúl Planas , Pío Leyva , Manuel "Puntillita" Licea , Félix Baloy , Yanko Pisaco and more recently Caridad Hierrezuelo and Pedro Calvo . In early 1996 Nick Gold , head of World Circuit Records , invited Ry Cooder to participate in an experiment combining Cuban and African musicians. A group of Cuban musicians had already been assembled, including Rubén González as
164-401: A clarinet or two, a violin or two and tympani ( kettle drums ). At the beginning of the 20th century, the lighter and somewhat more elegant sound of the charanga emerged (see Early Cuban bands ). Initially, they were small orchestra of two violins, a cello, flute, timbales , güiro , and doublebass . Charanga and típicas competed with each other for years, but after 1930 it was clear that
246-526: A montuno as a final part of his El Bombín de Barretto . This was a swinging section, consisting of a repeated musical phrase, which introduced something of the son into the danzón (a tactic which was to recur again). Because of the popularity of son in the 1920s and 1930s, Aniceto Díaz in Rompiendo la rutina in 1929 added a vocal part, thereby creating a new genre called the danzonete. Later development led to more syncopation , which eventually led to
328-475: A Cuban American who leads cultural tours to Cuba, contests that the preponderance of traditional musicians was not solely a consequence of the "Buena Vista Social Club". Marques believes the notion that some music had been completely neglected in Cuba is "a romantic exaggeration that was propagated by U.S. media coverage", and the reality is that son trios have existed "everywhere in cities such as Santiago de Cuba in
410-403: A big band of veteran Cuban musicians and singers, most of whom had careers that went back to the 1950s Havana scene: Ibrahim Ferrer , Pío Leyva , Manuel 'Puntillita' Licea , Raúl Planas, Félix Baloy , and José Antonio "Maceo" Rodríguez. Cooder also played slide guitar on one track, "Alto Songo". In the sleeve notes, de Marcos González, who directed the project and played tres, wrote: "This album
492-527: A black society, which was rooted in a cabildo . Cabildos were fraternities organized during the 19th century by African slaves. The existence of many other black societies such as Marianao Social Club, Unión Fraternal, Club Atenas (whose members included doctors and engineers), and Buenavista Social Club, exemplified the remnants of institutionalized racial discrimination against Afro-Cubans . These societies operated as recreational centers where workers went to drink, play games, dance and listen to music. In
574-661: A brand label that encapsulates Cuba's "musical golden age" between the 1930s and 1950s. The new success was fleeting for the most recognizable artists in the ensemble: Compay Segundo , Rubén González , and Ibrahim Ferrer , who died aged 95, 84, and 78 respectively; Compay Segundo and González in 2003, then Ferrer in 2005. Several surviving members of the Buena Vista Social Club, such as tresero Eliades Ochoa , veteran singer Omara Portuondo , trumpeter Manuel "Guajiro" Mirabal , and laúd player Barbarito Torres currently tour worldwide. The Buenavista Social Club
656-479: A change from the older son-style dances, as younger Cubans broke free of step-oriented dances... The occurrence of these closures and the change in traditions is the simplest explanation of why many musicians were out of work, and why their style of music had declined before the Buena Vista Social Club made it popular again. In 1996, American guitarist Ry Cooder had been invited to Havana by British world music producer Nick Gold of World Circuit Records to record
738-419: A day's recording session. After playing the piece, González explained to Cooder the history of the social club and that the song was the club's "mascot tune". When searching for a name for the overall project, manager Nick Gold chose the song's title. According to Cooder, It should be the thing that sets it apart. It was a kind of club by then. Everybody was hanging out and we had rum and coffee around two in
820-423: A documentary entitled Buena Vista Social Club , and the entire group of Cuban artists became famous worldwide. Buena Vista Social Club Buena Vista Social Club was a musical ensemble primarily made up of Cuban musicians, formed in 1996. The project was organized by World Circuit executive Nick Gold , produced by American guitarist Ry Cooder and directed by Juan de Marcos González . They named
902-678: A full line-up in Amsterdam in April 1998 (two nights) and a second time in Carnegie Hall , New York City on 1 July 1998. The completed documentary was released on 17 September 1999, and included scenes in New York of the Cubans, some of whom had never left the island, window shopping and visiting tourist sites. According to Sight & Sound magazine , these scenes of "innocents abroad" were
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#1732775978754984-441: A guitar has come out to sing the songs that Buena Vista made famous. It's as if you were to go to Liverpool and find bands singing Beatles songs on every street corner." The songs Buena Vista sings are often not their own compositions. Some songs they sing have long been popular in Cuba and people have always performed them in the street. Despite the appeal of the "Buena Vista" ambience to tourists, Cubans themselves were less aware of
1066-456: A music industry conference at Miami Beach in 1998, hundreds of protesters chanted outside and the convention center hall was cleared briefly because of a bomb threat. In 1999, Ferrer and Ruben González were forced to cancel Miami shows citing fears for their safety after fellow-Cubans Los Van Van drew 4,000 protesters at a previous show, and Compay Segundo was forced to cut short a 1999 Miami performance due to another bomb threat. When touring
1148-449: A radical change in the 1960s, as National Geographic notes: Cuban dance music also witnessed dramatic change beginning in the late 1960s, as groups explored the fusion of Cuban son with American rock, jazz and funk styles. Groups such as Los Van Van and Irakere established modern forms of Cuban music, paving the way for new rhythms and dances to emerge as well as fresh concepts in instrumentation. ... Cuba's dance music had already inspired
1230-498: A reviewer at The Independent described the ensemble as "something of an anomaly in music business terms, due to their changing line-up and the fact that they've never really had one defining front person", adding, "It's hard to know what to expect from what is more of a brand than a band." The international success of the Buena Vista Social Club generated a revival of interest in traditional Cuban music and Latin American music as
1312-431: A session in which African musicians from Mali were to collaborate with Cuban musicians. On Cooder's arrival (via Mexico to avoid the ongoing U.S. trade and travel embargo against Cuba ), it transpired that the musicians from Mali had not received their visas and were unable to travel to Havana. Cooder and Gold changed their plans and decided to record an album of Cuban son music with local musicians. Already on board
1394-411: A syncopated open vamp in which soloists may sometimes improvise, creating an ABACD or, more common, ABACAD. In danzón, the mambo section is the final section of an arrangement. It was first devised by Orestes López , who added syncopated motifs taken from the son, together with improvised flute variations. He called this type of danzón ritmo nuevo (new rhythm). Orestes' danzón Mambo was the start of
1476-527: A whole. Musical director Juan de Marcos felt that the recordings serve "as a symbol of the power of Cuban music, and which to a certain degree have contributed to Cuban music regaining the status it always had in Latin American and world music." Cuba's burgeoning tourist industry of the late 1990s benefited from this rebirth of interest. According to The Economist , "In the tourist quarters of Old Havana it can seem at times as if every Cuban with
1558-527: A wider range of music. Danzón was also very popular in the Gulf Coast state of Veracruz , Mexico, because of the strong Cuban influence in the region. Later on, danzón developed in Mexico City , specially in the famous Salón México ; it has survived as a dance longer there than in Cuba. Danzón also flourished in the city of Oaxaca , and many famous danzones were composed by Oaxacan musicians such as
1640-739: Is dedicated to Rubén González, genius of Cuban piano". During follow-on sessions also held at EGREM Studios in March 1996, Cooder then produced the Grammy winning Buena Vista Social Club , featuring Rubén González (piano), Compay Segundo , Ibrahim Ferrer, Omara Portuondo and Eliades Ochoa , supported by much of the same band that had recorded the Afro-Cuban All Stars album, and with Juan de Marcos González now acting as A & R Consultant. Cooder played guitars on all but one track. Finally, in April 1996 and using left over studio time after
1722-762: Is recalled by Juan Cruz, former director of the Marianao Social Club and master of ceremonies at the Salón Rosado de la Tropical (other nightclubs in Havana). As seen in the Buena Vista Social Club documentary, when musicians Ry Cooder, Compay Segundo and a film crew attempted to identify the location of the club in the 1990s, local people could not agree on where it had stood. At the time, clubs in Cuba were segregated; there were sociedades de blancos (white societies), sociedades de negros (black societies), etc. The Buenavista Social Club operated as
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#17327759787541804-574: Is reflected in many popular Cuban music genres, in Cuban Latin jazz , salsa , songo and timba , the latter building upon the charanga orchestration. Groups like Los Van Van and Orquesta Revé developed from charangas. Their make-up and orchestration (by Juan Formell ) has been so greatly altered that it is difficult to identify traces of danzón; indeed, their present styles owe more to son than to danzón. The addition of brass instruments such as trombones and trumpets, and conga drums signalled
1886-480: The Buena Vista Social Club recording and performances, Segundo played a unique seven-stringed instrument, a hybrid between a guitar and a tres, which he devised himself and called an armónico . He also sang, mostly doing background vocals, in a number of songs in his baritone voice, including the self-penned opening track, Chan Chan, with Eliades Ochoa as the leading voice. Cowboy hat wearing Eliades Ochoa (b. 1946), who had collaborated previously with Segundo and
1968-614: The Cuban Revolution of 1959, newly elected Cuban President Manuel Urrutia Lleó , a devout Christian, began a program of closing gambling outlets, nightclubs, and other establishments associated with Havana's hedonistic lifestyle. This had an immediate impact on the livelihoods of local entertainers. As the Cuban government rapidly shifted towards the left in an effort to build a "classless and colourblind society", it struggled to define policy toward forms of cultural expression in
2050-592: The European Film Awards . This was followed up by a second documentary Buena Vista Social Club: Adios in 2017. The success of both the album and film sparked a revival of interest in traditional Cuban music and Latin American music in general. Some of the Cuban performers later released well-received solo albums and recorded collaborations with stars from different musical genres. The "Buena Vista Social Club" name became an umbrella term to describe these performances and releases, and has been likened to
2132-597: The Rolling Stones . Known for his slide guitar work, his interest in roots music led him to record music from diverse genres including Tex-Mex , Hawaiian and Tuvan throat singing . He was later prosecuted and fined $ 25,000 by U.S. authorities for his work on the Buena Vista Social Club , having broken the Trading with the Enemy Act , a clause that forms part of the ongoing United States embargo . Many of
2214-427: The danzón-chá , nuevo ritmo , cha-cha-chá , pachanga and mambo . From the 1940s to the 1960s danzón and its derivatives were highly popular in Cuba, with several truly fine charangas playing most days of the week. Orquesta Aragón kept up an exceptionally high standard for many years, but the danzón itself gradually dropped out, and is now a relic dance. Danzón has never ceased to influence Cuban musicians, and it
2296-538: The habanera , a creolized Cuban dance form. By 1879, the year Las alturas de Simpson composed by Miguel Failde (leader of the Orquesta Faílde ) was first performed in Matanzas , danzón had emerged as a distinct genre. Creation of the new danzón form is generally attributed to Faílde. The classical composer Manuel Saumell has also been cited as a key figure in its delineation. The English contradanza
2378-418: The "Buena Vista Social Club" than international music listeners. This was due to the foreign nature of the production, and the dominance of modern Timba , Songo and other musical forms on the island. Some explain that Buena Vista did not impact the Cuban audience, as they were not creating anything new; they were just playing the same songs that Cubans know and have been playing for many years. Mari Marques,
2460-483: The 1940s, before his soft singing style fell out of fashion. Having found the semi-retired seventy-year-old Ferrer taking his daily stroll on the streets of Havana and shining shoes for extra money, González signed him up for the project. Cooder later described the discovery as something that happens "perhaps once in your life", and Ferrer as "the Cuban Nat King Cole ". Ferrer became a prominent member of
2542-562: The African collaboration project were Cuban musicians including bassist Orlando "Cachaíto" López , guitarist Eliades Ochoa and musical director Juan de Marcos González , who had himself been organizing a similar project for the Afro-Cuban All Stars . A search for additional musicians led the team to singer Manuel "Puntillita" Licea , pianist Rubén González and octogenarian singer Compay Segundo , who all agreed to record for
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2624-623: The Caribbean and Latin America, the danzón was initially regarded as scandalous, especially when it began to be danced by all classes of society. The slower rhythm of the danzón led to couples dancing closer, with sinuous movements of the hips and a lower centre of gravity. The author of a survey of prostitution in Havana devoted a whole chapter to the iniquities of dancing, and the danzón in particular. Articles in newspapers and periodicals took up
2706-478: The Cuban government continued to support traditional music after the revolution, certain favor was given to the politically charged nueva trova , and poetic singer-songwriters such as Silvio Rodríguez and Pablo Milanés . The emergence of pop music and salsa , a style derived from Cuban music but developed in the United States, meant that son music became even less common. Cuban music experienced quite
2788-568: The Cuban musicians who featured on the album were at their musical prime in the 1940s and 1950s. After the success of the 1997 record they became known in Cuba as " Los Superabuelos " (the Super-Grandfathers). Juan de Marcos González , a Cuban folk revivalist who was younger than the bulk of performers introduced Cooder to veteran singer Ibrahim Ferrer . Ferrer (1927–2005) had been lead vocalist for bandleader Pacho Alonso , and also sang for Beny Moré , Cuba's most prominent performer in
2870-636: The U.S., and they'd have dances and activities. As a music venue, the Buenavista Social Club experienced the peak of Havana's nightclub life, when charangas and conjuntos played several sets every night, going from club to club over the course of a week. Often, bands would dedicate songs to the clubs where they played. In the case of the Buenavista Social Club, an eponymous danzón was composed by Israel López "Cachao" in 1938, and performed with Arcaño y sus Maravillas . In addition, Arsenio Rodríguez dedicated "Buenavista en guaguancó" to
2952-545: The U.S., the Cubans are only entitled to their per diem (transportation and lodging) and are not permitted performance fees due to the U.S. embargo. In 2001 a Buena Vista Social Club (with Ibrahim Ferrer) performance was recorded in Austin for PBS and broadcast on Austin City Limits in 2002. Musicians associated with Buena Vista Social Club have toured throughout the world as Orquesta Buena Vista Social Club, and despite
3034-631: The afternoon. It felt like a club, so let's call it that. That's what gave it a handle. Upon release on 17 September 1997, the CD became a huge "word of mouth hit", far beyond that of most world music releases. It sold more than one million copies and won a Grammy award in 1998. In 2003 it was listed by the New York-based Rolling Stone magazine as #260 in The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time . A total of twenty musicians contributed to
3116-490: The black community; expressions which had implicitly emphasized cultural differences. Consequently, the cultural and social centers were abolished, including the Afro-Cuban mutual aid Sociedades de Color in 1962, to make way for racially integrated societies. Private festivities were limited to weekend parties and organizers' funds were confiscated. The measures meant the closure of the Buena Vista Social Club. Although
3198-764: The continuity of the songs. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for best documentary feature in 1999. It won best documentary at the European Film Awards and received seventeen other major accolades internationally. The first performances by the full line up of Buena Vista Social Club, including Cooder, were those filmed by Wenders in Amsterdam and New York. Other international shows and television appearances soon followed with varying line ups. Ibrahim Ferrer and Rubén González performed together in Los Angeles in 1998 to an audience that included Alanis Morissette , Sean Combs , and Jennifer Lopez , Ferrer dedicating
3280-570: The couples stand listening to virtuoso instrumental passages, as characteristically played by a charanga or típica ensemble. The danzón evolved from the Cuban contradanza , or habanera ( lit. ' Havana -dance'). The contradanza, which had English and French roots in the country dance and contredanse , was probably introduced to Cuba by the Spanish, who ruled the island for almost four centuries (1511–1898), contributing many thousands of immigrants. It may also have been partially seeded during
3362-426: The criticism was to no avail. The danzón became hugely popular, and was the dominant popular music in Cuba until the advent of the son in the 1920s. At length the Cuban government made Faílde the official inventor of the danzón – but not until 1960 , by which time the danzón had become a relic, and its 'child', the chachachá , had taken over. In 1910, some 30 years after Faílde's early days, José Urfé added
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3444-459: The danzón include complex instrumental cross-rhythms , expressed in staggered cinquillo and tresillo patterns. By 1879, the year Miguel Failde 's Las alturas de Simpson was first performed (in Matanzas ), danzón had emerged as a distinct genre. Danzón went on to interact with 20th century Cuban genres such as son , and through the danzón-mambo it was instrumental in the development of mambo and cha-cha-chá . The danzón developed from
3526-419: The danzón." The form of danzón created by Miguel Faílde in 1879 ( Las alturas de Simpson ), begins with an introduction (four bars) and paseo (four bars), which are repeated and followed by a 16-bar melody. The introduction and paseo again repeat before a second melody is played. The dancers do not dance during these sections: they choose partners, stroll onto the dance floor, and begin to dance at precisely
3608-432: The days of the típica were over. In 1898, a piano was included in a charanga for the first time. In Antonio María Romeu 's hands a piano became standard. Its musical flexibility, its ability to influence both melody and rhythm, made it invaluable. In 1926, in his arrangement of Tres lindas cubanas , Romeu incorporated a piano solo for the first time. His was Cuba's top charanga for many years. Similar to other dances in
3690-521: The deaths of six of the original members, the collective performed with many of the remaining ensemble members including Barbarito Torres and "Guajiro" Mirabal. Ry Cooder's guitar parts were handled by Manuel Galbán, a former member of Cuban vocal group Los Zafiros , who played on Ibrahim Ferrer's first solo record with Cooder and appeared in Wim Wenders' film. Following a 2007 performance in London,
3772-494: The east of the island." British world music record label Tumi Music , who had worked with de Marcos and many of the ensemble musicians prior to Cooder, asserted that Cuba has over 50,000 musicians, all as good as, and some as old as the "Buena Vista" participants, "but these people hardly ever have the opportunity to share their talents with the outside world." The label lamented that, "for the West to pay any real attention and consume
3854-514: The ensemble to perform with a full line-up in Amsterdam and New York in 1998. German director Wim Wenders captured the performance on film for a documentary —also called Buena Vista Social Club —that included interviews with the musicians conducted in Havana. Wenders' film was released in June 1999 to critical acclaim, receiving an Academy Award nomination for Best Documentary feature and winning numerous accolades including Best Documentary at
3936-455: The famous Nereidas and Teléfono de larga distancia, both works of Amador Pérez Dimas , from the town of Zaachila , near Oaxaca city. Today, people still dance danzón in Mexico, particularly in the main plazas of Veracruz, Oaxaca and Mexico City, and in yearly festivals across Mexico. The dance had a second revival in the 1990s, especially among Mexico's senior citizens. A film called Danzón
4018-423: The film's most moving moments, as the contrasts between societies of Havana and New York become evident on the faces of the performers. Ferrer, from an impoverished background and staunchly anti consumerist , was shown describing the city as "beautiful" and finding the experience overwhelming. Upon completion of filming, Wenders felt that the film "didn't feel really like it was a documentary anymore. It felt like it
4100-570: The group after the members' club of the same name in the Buenavista quarter of Havana , a popular music venue in the 1940s. To showcase the popular styles of the time, such as son , bolero and danzón , they recruited a dozen veteran musicians, some of whom had been retired for many years. The group's eponymous studio album was recorded in March 1996 and released in September 1997, quickly becoming an international success, which prompted
4182-478: The group, and the success of the record was attributed in part to the popularity of his vocal performances. The singer went on to record a number of successful solo albums and performed with contemporary acts such as the Gorillaz before his death in 2005 at the age of 78. Virtuoso pianist Rubén González (1919–2003) also had further success releasing two solo albums after working on the initial project. González
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#17327759787544264-432: The island to film the recording of Buena Vista Social Club Presents: Ibrahim Ferrer , the singer's first solo album, in 1998. Wenders filmed the recording sessions on the recently enhanced format Digital Video with the help of cinematographer Robert Müller, and then shot interviews with each "Buena Vista" ensemble member in different Havana locations. Wenders was also present to film the group's first performance with
4346-418: The modern era, but that the Cuban government were happy for the tourist industry to "enjoy the fruits of this confusion". The American Historical Review suggested that the Buena Vista Social Club' s mise en scène fueled nostalgic, idealistic feelings not only of many Americans and Cubans in the United States who remember the Havana of the 1950s, but also of Cubans in Cuba. The result was a reminiscence about
4428-483: The musicians in the ensemble, and that are considered to be under the "Buena Vista Social Club" aegis. Danz%C3%B3n Danzón is the official musical genre and dance of Cuba . It is also an active musical form in Mexico and Puerto Rico . Written in 4 time , the danzón is a slow, formal partner dance , requiring set footwork around syncopated beats, and incorporating elegant pauses while
4510-405: The organizing principle of sub-Saharan African rhythm, known in Cuba as clave . Danzón is elegant and virtuoso music, with dance. A danzón, in its original form, was not sung, and did not feature any improvisations, unlike some other Cuban genres. A danzón has the following typical structure: The classic form is thus ABAC or ABACA. A danzón-chá or danzón-mambo typically add another part (D),
4592-572: The pianist. However, since the African musicians had experienced difficulties in obtaining visas, the focus changed to recording Cuban music instead. In March 1996, Gold and Juan de Marcos González (previously the tres player of Sierra Maestra ) produced A Toda Cuba le Gusta , the first album by the Afro-Cuban All Stars. It was recorded at the EGREM Studios in Havana and featured Rubén González (piano), Orlando "Cachaíto" López (bass), and
4674-438: The pre-revolutionary era—dominated by the politics of Gerardo Machado in the 1920s–30s and then General Fulgencio Batista until 1959—which "no longer seems so bad". A stage musical adaptation with the same name as the album and focusing on the history and performers of the group was staged Off-Broadway in 2023. The below discography includes solo albums released since the first Buena Vista Social Club album that feature
4756-426: The product, you needed someone like Ry Cooder to give it a stamp of approval first." British Socialist Workers Party member and Marxist writer Mike Gonzalez believes the ensemble provoked a backward glance to "timeless, sensual places where dreams and desire merged in a comfortable, evocative music". Gonzalez asserts that the aura evoked did not represent "the real Cuba" before the revolution of 1959, nor Cuba in
4838-528: The project. Within three days of the project's birth, Cooder, Gold and de Marcos had organized a large group of performers and arranged for recording sessions to commence at Havana's EGREM Studios, formerly owned by RCA records, where the equipment and atmosphere had remained unchanged since the 1950s. Communication between the Spanish and English speakers at the studio was conducted via an interpreter, although Cooder reflected that "musicians understand each other through means other than speaking". The album
4920-497: The recording including Ry Cooder's son Joachim Cooder , who at the time was a 19-year-old scholar of Latin percussion and provided drums for the band. Ry Cooder himself played slide guitar on several songs and helped produce and mix the album, afterwards describing the sessions as "the greatest musical experience of my life". Ry Cooder had been a successful American guitarist since the 1960s, recording with Captain Beefheart and
5002-445: The same moment: the fourth beat of bar four of the paseo, which has a distinctive percussion pattern that's hard to miss. When the introduction is repeated the dancers stop, chat, flirt, greet their friends, and start again, right on time as the paseo finishes. Early danzón was played by groups called orquestas típicas , which were based on wind instruments. They had several brass instruments ( cornet , valve trombone , ophicleide ),
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#17327759787545084-570: The same place. Together with Orquesta Melodías del 40, the Maravillas and Arsenio's conjunto were known as Los Tres Grandes (The Big Three), drawing the largest audiences wherever they played. These vibrant times in Havana were described by pianist Rubén González , who played in Arsenio's conjunto, as "an era of real musical life in Cuba, when there was very little money to earn, but everyone played because they really wanted to". Shortly after
5166-505: The sessions that had produced the previous two albums, the solo album Introducing...Rubén González was recorded in just two days, live with no overdubs. On the album's outer cover, Cooder is quoted as saying: "The greatest piano soloist I have ever heard in my entire life. A Cuban cross between Thelonious Monk and Felix the Cat ". All three albums were released on Nick Gold's World Circuit Records in 1997. In early 1998, Wim Wenders filmed
5248-479: The short-lived British occupation of Havana in 1762. Haitian refugees fleeing the island's revolution of 1791–1804 brought the French-Haitian kontradans , contributing their own Creole syncopation. In Cuba, the dances of European origin acquired new stylistic features derived from African rhythm and dance to produce a genuine fusion of European and African influences. African musical traits in
5330-559: The song Mami Me Gusto to the Hispanic Lopez. Performances in Florida, which has a large Cuban exile and Cuban American community, were rare after the release of the film due to the political climate. In the late 1990s, a concert by Cuban jazz pianist Gonzalo Rubalcaba turned into a near riot when concert goers were attacked and spat at by protesters opposed to the Cuban government . When "Buena Vista" musicians played for
5412-436: The soundtrack to Wenders' film The End of Violence , the third such collaboration between the two artists. According to Wenders, it was an effort to force Cooder to focus on the project, "He always sort of looked in the distance and smiled, and I knew he was back in Havana." Although Wenders knew nothing about Cuban music at the time, he became enthused by tapes of the Havana sessions provided by Cooder, and agreed to travel to
5494-412: The subsequent release, Introducing...Rubén González , which showcased the work of the Cuban pianist. One of the songs that featured on the album was "Buena Vista Social Club", a danzón written by Orestes López , the father of bass player "Cachaíto". The song spotlighted the piano work of Rubén González and it was recorded after Cooder heard González improvising around the tune's musical theme before
5576-450: The success of the 1997 record, González recorded and toured with bassist Orlando "Cachaíto" López , who was the only musician to play on all of the songs on the Buena Vista Social Club album. "Cachaito" (1933–2009) was the son of multi-instrumentalist Orestes López and the nephew of fellow bassist Israel "Cachao" López , the brothers often attributed with inventing the mambo . Named after his prestigious uncle, "Cachaito" (little Cachao)
5658-419: The theme: Apparently, the danzón, which later became an insipid dance for older couples, was at first danced with "obscene movements" of the hips by young couples in close embrace, with bodies touching, and by couples who might come from different races... So, behind the concern about music and dance were concerns about sexual licence, and about miscegenation , the mixing of races. As with other similar cases,
5740-480: The veteran Segundo said: "Politics? This new guy [Fidel Castro] is good. The 1930s were rough. That's when we had the really bad times." Segundo was an accomplished guitarist and tres player who started his career playing with established bands of the 1920s and 1930s. In the 1940s, he gained fame as one half of the Los Compadres duo, and then formed Los Muchachos, a band that he led until his death in 2003. For
5822-451: The words of Ry Cooder , Society in Cuba and in the Caribbean including New Orleans, as far as I know, was organized around these fraternal social clubs. There were clubs of cigar wrappers, clubs for baseball players and they'd play sports and cards—whatever it is they did in their club—and they had mascots, like dogs. At the Buena Vista Social Club, musicians went there to hang out with each other, like they used to do at musicians' unions in
5904-497: Was a co-ordinated dance of figures performed by groups of Matanzas blacks. The dancers held the ends of colored ribbons, and carried flower-covered arches. The group twisted and entwined the ribbons to make pleasing patterns. This account can be corroborated by other references, for example, a traveler in Cuba noted in 1854 that black Cubans "do a kind of wreath dance, in which the whole company took part, amid innumerable artistic entanglements and disentanglements". This style of danzón
5986-422: Was a leading Descarga musician in the 1950s and 1960s, a musical form that takes its influence from modern jazz , and he became the ever-present bassist at Buena Vista Social Club performances and recordings. One of the first to come on board the project was Compay Segundo (born Máximo Francisco Repilado Muñoz) (1907–2003), who at 89 years old was the oldest of the performers. During a discussion about politics,
6068-617: Was a members-only club originally located in Buenavista (literally good view ), a quarter in the current neighbourhood of Playa (before 1976 part of Marianao ), one of the 15 municipalities in Cuba's capital, Havana . The original club was founded in 1932 in a small wooden venue at calle Consulado y pasaje "A" (currently calle 29, n. 6007 ). In 1939, due to lack of space the club relocated to number 4610 on Avenue 31, between calles 46 and 48, in Almendares, Marianao. This location
6150-518: Was a pianist for bandleader Arsenio Rodríguez in the 1940s, and is attributed with helping establish Cuban piano styles that were to dominate Latin music for the remainder of the century. Despite suffering from arthritis and not even owning a piano at the time of recording with Cooder, (due to an infestation of termites whilst living in South America) the American guitarist described him as "the greatest piano soloist I have ever heard". After
6232-499: Was a true character piece". The film became a box office success, grossing $ 23,002,182 worldwide. Critics were generally enthusiastic about the story and especially the music, although leading U.S. film critic Roger Ebert and the British Film Institute 's Peter Curran felt that Wenders had lingered too long on Cooder during the performances; and the editing, which interspersed interviews with music, had disrupted
6314-549: Was a well established traditional Cuban folk performer, played guitar and sang for the group. Omara Portuondo (b. 1930), a bolero singer and the only female in the collective, sang " Veinte Años " on the record and duets with Segundo and Ibrahim Ferrer during live performances. Other performers included singer Pío Leyva (1917–2006) who had been working with Segundo since the early 1950s, and fellow and singer Manuel "Puntillita" Licea (1927–2000), who had performed with Celia Cruz and Benny Moré . Additional improvised percussion
6396-433: Was performed at carnival comparsas by black groups: it is described that way before the late 1870s. Faílde's first danzóns were created for just such sequence dances. Faílde himself said "In Matanzas at this time there was a kind of square dance for twenty couples who carried arches and flowers. It was really a dance of figures (sequence dance), and its moves were adapted to the tempo of the habanera, which we took over for
6478-554: Was provided by Amadito Valdés and Carlos González. The youngest established member of the group was Barbarito Torres , (b. 1956) a virtuoso player of the laúd , a Cuban offshoot of the lute . Trumpet was provided by Manuel "Guajiro" Mirabal , (1933-2024) who went on to release solo records under the Buena Vista presents... title. Shortly after returning from Havana to record the Buena Vista Social Club album, Ry Cooder began working with German film director Wim Wenders on
6560-480: Was recorded in just six days and contained fourteen tracks; opening with " Chan Chan " written by Compay Segundo, a four chord son that was to become what Cooder described as "the Buena Vista's calling card"; and ending with a rendition of "La Bayamesa", a romantic criolla composed by Sindo Garay (not to be confused with the Cuban national anthem of the same name ). The sessions also produced material for
6642-431: Was released in 1991 directed by María Novaro. Danzón no. 2 by Mexican composer Arturo Márquez (b. 1950) is a popular piece in orchestral concerts. The basic timbales part for danzón is called the baqueteo. In the example above, the slashed noteheads indicate muted drum strokes, and the regular noteheads indicate open strokes. The güiro also plays this pattern. The danzón was the first written music to be based on
6724-464: Was the predecessor of the " habanera ", also known as danza criolla . Out of this Creole genre, the Habanera , was born in 1879 another Cuban genre, called danzon, a sequence dance , in which all danced together a set of figures . The first use of the term danzón , which dates from the 1850s, is for just such a dance. Havana's daily paper, El Triunfo , gave a description of this earlier danzón. It
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