Pongo en tus manos abiertas | ||||
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Studio album by Víctor Jara | ||||
Released | June, 1969 | |||
Recorded | Santiago, Chile 1969 | |||
Genre | Folk music Protest music Nueva canción |
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Length | 41:23 | |||
Label | DICAP Warner Bros. Records |
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Producer | Víctor Jara | |||
Víctor Jara chronology | ||||
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Pongo en tus manos abiertas ("I Put Into Your Open Hands") is an album recorded by Víctor Jara with the musicians from Quilapayún in June, 1969. It was the third album released by the DICAP record label.[1]
Contents |
The name given to the album is the opening line to Jara's homage to the founder of the Chilean labour movement and Communist Party of Chile, Luis Emilio Recabarren:
Pongo en tus manos | Into your open |
abiertas | hands |
mi guitarra de cantor, | I place my singers guitar |
martillo de los mineros, | the hammer of the miners |
arado del Labrador. | the peasant’s plough. |
The album includes recordings of songs written by Jara and songs that Jara interprets of other Latin American Nueva Canción (New Song) singer-songwriters, such as the Uruguayan Daniel Viglietti and the Argentine Atahualpa Yupanqui that were highly influential to artists of the Nueva Canción Chilena (New Chilean Song) movement.
There is a song in tribute to Che Guevara and a song about the revolutionary Colombian priest and one of the first martyrs of the Liberation theology movement, Camilo Torres.
This albums also contains a song written by Jara commenting on a massacre that occurred in the city of Puerto Montt in Chile in 1969. In it, Jara condemns the then Christian Democrat Minister of the Interior Edmundo Pérez Zujovic for the death of 11 men, women, and children during the massacre of Puerto Montt.
In the early morning of March the 9th, 1969 the wealthy businessman and Interior Minister, Pérez Zujovic, authorized 250 armed police to attack and open fire on 91 homeless peasant families who were occupying private wastelands in the remote part of Puerto Montt. Tear gas grenades, dogs and machine gun fire were used to terrorize and evict the impoverished peasant squatters. Many of the peasants suffered shot wounds, many were killed, including a 9-month-old child.[2]
Usted debe responder | "You will have to answer |
señor Pérez Zujovic | Mr Pérez Zujovic |
porqué al pueblo indefenso, | why were defenseless people |
contestaron con fusil. | replied to with guns. |
Señor Pérez su conciencia | "Mr Pérez your conscience |
la enterró en un ataúd | is now buried in a coffin |
y no limpiarán sus manos | and all the southern rains |
toda la lluvia del sur. | won't clean your hands. |
The album contained one of Víctor Jara most famous and beautiful songs, "Te recuerdo Amanda" ("I remember you Amanda"), which has been adapted to various languages and interpreted by various artists from all over the world such as Joan Baez, Robert Wyatt, Raimon and Cornelis Vreeswijk.
I PUT IN YOUR OPEN HANDS…
Laughter and blows,
Hope and protest.
A shout emerges crossing the large expanse of our territory.
It is the peasant nailing a plough on the land,
the worker filling the air with protest on May Day,
the student and his word
in street battles,
the youth,
that for being young,
cannot but look forward into the future.
And all this is present
in the youth that struggles
and in the song of protest.
The new song of Victor Jara unites,
from his position as activist of the people’s cause,
the spirit of the young generation of our land,
the lengthy tradition of the workers struggles
the awaken conscious of the artist
which is identified more than compromised with the people.
During these days in which the Communist Youth
gather for their VI Congress
to reassert their decision to receive the message
which places in their “OPEN HANDS”
the visionary father of the New Homeland,
Luis Emilio Recabarren.
We also place in the open hands
of all the Chilean youth
These songs that speak to us
about our convictions,
our hopes
of ourselves.
—Santiago, June 1969 [3]
The reissue of Pongo en tus manos abiertas historic recording by Warner in March 2001 was extended with 6 bonus tracks:
Jara, Joan. (1983). Victor: An Unfinished Song. Jonathan Cape Ltd. ISBN 0-224-01880-9