Buena Vista Social Club (album)
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Buena Vista Social Club | ||
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Studio album by Buena Vista Social Club | ||
Released | September 16, 1997 | |
Recorded | March 1996 | |
Genre | Son Bolero Guajira |
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Length | 60:00 | |
Label | World Circuit / Nonesuch Records | |
Producer | Ry Cooder | |
Professional reviews | ||
Buena Vista Social Club is an album made by Juan de Marcos González and American guitarist Ry Cooder with traditional Cuban musicians. The album was produced by Cooder who travelled to Cuba to record sessions with the musicians, many of whom were previously largely unknown outside Cuba. The musicians and the songs were later also featured in a documentary film of the same name.
The music featured on the album was inspired by the Buena Vista Social Club, a membership club that was at its height during the 1940s/50s. Many of the musicians performing on the record were either former performers at the club or were prominent Cuban musicians during the era of the club's existence. Other younger musicians on the record trace their musical roots back to pre-revolutionary Cuban music, mainly the famous Havana musical scene of the 1950s.
Buena Vista Social Club started a craze in the Western World for Latin American music, particularly Cuban music.[citation needed]
In 2003 the album was listed by Rolling Stone magazine as #260 in The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.
Contents[hide] |
[edit] Background to the recording
In 1996, American guitarist Ry Cooder had been invited to Havana by British world music producer Nick Gold of World Circuit Records to record a session where two African High-life musicians from Mali were to collaborate with Cuban musicians.[1] On Cooder's arrival (via Mexico to avoid the ongoing U.S. trade and travel embargo against Cuba),[2] it transpired that the musicians from Africa 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.[1]
Already on board the African collaboration project were Cuban musicians including bassist Orlando "Cachaito" 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 the project.[1]
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.[3] 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".[1]
The album 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";[4] and ending with a rendition of La Bayamesa, a traditional Cuban patriotic song (not to be confused with the Cuban national anthem of the same name).[5] The sessions also produced material for the subsequent release, Introducing... Rubén González, which showcased the work of the Cuban pianist.[2]
[edit] Songs
[edit] Chan Chan
"Chan Chan", the first song on the album, is a Cuban song composition by Compay Segundo, revolving around two central characters, 'Juanita' and 'Chan Chan'.[6] The song was one of Compay's last compositions and was written in 1987.[6] "Chan Chan" was recorded by Segundo himself various times as well as by many other Latin artists.
[edit] El Cuarto de Tula
El Cuarto de Tula was composed by Luis Marquetti, cousin of Cuban singer songwriter Cheo Marquetti, in 1945. It is sung by Eliades Ochoa with Ibrahim Ferrer and Manuel "Puntillita" Licea joining Ochoa in an extended descarga (jam) section improvising lyrics. Barbarito Torres plays a frenetic lute solo towards the end of the track. Timbales are played by the 13 year old Julienne Oviedo Sánchez.[7]
[edit] Dos Gardenias
Dos Gardenias is a bolero sung by Ibrahim Ferrer. The song was written by Isolina Carillo in the 1930s and became a huge success in the 1940s. The song was chosen for the album after Cooder heard Ferrer and Rubén González improvising the melody before a recording session. Ferrer learned the song whilst playing with Cuban bandleader Benny More.[8]
[edit] Y Tú Qué Has Hecho?
Y Tú Qué Has Hecho was written 1920’s by Eusebio Delfín and features his friend Compay Segundo on tres and vocals. Segundo was traditionally a "second voice" singer providing a baritone counterpoint harmony. On the Buena Vista Social Club recording of Y Tú Qué Has Hecho, he multitracks both voices. The song also features a duet between Segundo on tres and Ry Cooder on guitar.[9]
[edit] Veinte Años
Veinte Años is a bolero written by Mar’a Teresa Vera and is sung on the Buena Vista album by the only female in the ensemble, Omara Portuondo with Segundo providing baritone.[10]
[edit] El Carretero
El Carretero is a guajira (country lament) sung by Eliades Ochoa with the full ensemble providing additional instruments and backing vocals.
[edit] Candela
Candela is a popular song written by Faustino Oramas with lyrics rich with sexual innuendo. On the album it is sung by Ibrahim Ferrer who improvises vocal lines throughout the track, and the whole ensemble perform an extended descarga.
[edit] Buena Vista Social Club
Buena Vista Social Club was written by bass player "Cachaíto"’s father, Orestes López.[1] 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 a day's recording session. After playing the tune, González explained to Cooder the history of the social club and that the song was the club's "mascot tune".[1] 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 the afternoon. It felt like a club, so let’s call it that. That’s what gave it a handle."[1]
[edit] Track listing
- "Chan Chan" – 4:16
- "De Camino a la Vereda" – 5:03
- "El Cuarto de Tula" – 7:27
- "Pueblo Nuevo" – 6:05
- "Dos Gardenias" – 3:02
- "Y Tú Qué Has Hecho?" – 3:13
- "Veinte Años" – 3:29
- "El Carretero" – 3:28
- "Candela" – 5:27
- "Amor de Loca Juventud" – 3:21
- "Orgullecida" – 3:18
- "Murmullo" – 3:50
- "Buena Vista Social Club" – 4:50
- "La Bayamesa" – 2:54
[edit] References
- ^ a b c d e f g "Interview with Ry Cooder in Los Angeles, by Betty Arcos, host, “The Global Village” Pacifica Radio June 27, 2000". Buena Vista Social Club site. Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). Retrieved 18 March 2007.
- ^ a b "Hurricane Cooder hits Cuba". Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 20 March 2007
- ^ Compay Segundo Obituary Guardian Unlimited. Retrieved 18 March 2007.
- ^ "Life began at ninety" Guardian Unlimited. Retrieved 18 March 2007.
- ^ Las Bayamesas. La Jiribilla magazine. Juventud Rebelde. Retrieved 18 March 2007. "Desde finales de la segunda década del siglo pasado hasta nuestros días, no hay dudas de que en Bayamo se han escrito otras hermosas e importantes obras musicales, que podrían también llamarse bayamesas. Nadie puede negar sin embargo que las tres primeras bayamesas, compuestas ente 1851 y 1918, precisamente en un período rotundo de afirmación de nuestra identidad nacional, son parte entrañable del patrimonio de la nación cubana."
Translation: "From the end of the 1910s to the present day, there is no doubt that in Bayamo, beautiful and important music has been written that could also be called Bayamesas. Nobody can deny, nevertheless, that the first three Bayamesas, composed between 1851 and 1918 in a period of strong affirmation of our national identity, are an integral part of Cuban patriotism." - ^ a b PBS notes on Chan Chan
- ^ http://www.pbs.org/buenavista/music/songs/el_cuarto_de_tula.html PBS El Cuarto de Tula
- ^ http://www.pbs.org/buenavista/music/songs/dos_gardenias.html Dos Gardenias
- ^ http://www.pbs.org/buenavista/music/songs/y_tu_que.html Y Tú Qué Has Hecho?
- ^ http://www.pbs.org/buenavista/music/songs/viente_anos.html Veinte Años