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Posts Tagged ‘buenavista

Guayabero: Another Buena Vista member dead

2:37 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities| Cuba| Music · Comments Off

29 Mar 2007

guayabero.jpgMusic has lost another member of the legendary Cuban group Buena Vista Social Club. Faustino Oramas, El Guayabero, died on Tuesday at the age of 95 at a hospital in Holguin, Cuba:

Acting President Raul Castro, who was temporarily handed power in July after 80-year-old Cuban leader Fidel Castro underwent emergency stomach surgery, sent a floral tribute, the state news agency AIN said.

Often called the king of double-entendres, Oramas composed “Candela” — one of the most rhythmically charged tracks on the 1997 Buena Vista CD.

El Guayabero is the fifth member of Buena Vista to die in the past 4 years; others who have left us are Compay Segundo, Ruben Gonzalez, Ibrahim Ferrer and Pio Leyva.

Via / Yahoo! Entertainment

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Taking back “Dos Gardenias”

12:57 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Culture| Latin America| Music · Comments Off

19 Oct 2005

180099_ferrer_ibrahim.jpgA Cuban musical wave exploded in popularity in the late 90s all over the world with the premiere of Wim Wender’s documentary, The Buenavista Social Club, and the albums associated with the film, produced by American musician Ry Cooder. The most ironic thing about this “new breed” of music was that it was very old. The members of Buenavista were well into their 90s and the music is about as old as Cuba itself. Add to that the fact that the songs were guajiro standards, music of common people, and one wonders why it has had such mainstream appeal.

I was living in Mexico City at the time this movie was released, and I remember how it suddenly became “cool” to be Cuban. Formerly ignored Cuban immigrants were now the most popular people in town, the bartenders at the hottest new Cuban nightspots, which seemed to be popping up everywhere. Mexican upper crust was embracing Cubans as a result of this musical trend. When I returned to the States in 2000, I saw that though it had simmered a bit, Buenavista and their contemporaries had also had their day in the sun here. Perhaps it was even responsible for this mojito trend now in cocktail lounges everwhere? Ugh.

With Cuban son becoming popular in the U.S. there has been a price to pay. While it’s of immeasurable value that this music can now be enjoyed by people who otherwise would have been ignorant to its existence, the musicians who are still alive (leaders Compay Segundo and Ibrahim Ferrer have both died within the past three years) and their heirs are engaged in a legal battle with a U.S. record company to obtain the royalties due them since the rights were purchased by New Jersey-based Peer International in the 1930s.

These men, while national heroes and international superstars by the late 1990s, were still shining shoes and picking up odd jobs to supplement their state pension income checks. Now, say the remaining members and their families, it’s time to get what’s due them. Peer says that they were impeded from paying royalties due to the U.S. embargo. And to add an even more international touch, all of this drama is playing out in a court in London, where British lawyers for both sides are battling it out before an English judge, with evidence that’s over half a century old.

I’m pulling for los viejitos de la Habana.

Via / The Miami Herald and Latin Music News


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VivirLatino is a daily publication published by 2 Mujeres Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse and influential Latino and Latina community in the U.S.

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