Time. com Can Music Save Cuba?
Vignette StoryServer 5.0 Fri Nov 28 01:06:26 2008
Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2008
The Sound Of Change
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1862454,00.html
By Nathan Thornburgh/Havana
The Sound Of Change
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1862454,00.html
By Nathan Thornburgh/Havana
If this were a music video, it would start in this
living room in Havana, with a tight shot of the skinny kid in the white tank top
at the keyboard. He counts it off from four, and with a sort of animal ease, his
fingers fly, and a montuno rhythm swells through the dented amp, surging until
the drummer can't help joining in with the five-beat clave that is the backbone
of all music here. And then the camera swings to the timbalero with a pink star
dyed into his fade, cracking into the rhythm, and here comes the bass
player--whose father and grandfather were famous singers with Orquesta
Aragón--now he's thumping the ones and threes. This thing is really moving now;
the horns punch in, and the camera pans across the room to the three singers by
the door, with Oscar in the middle, improvising over a chorus in that high,
almost nasal cant of the salsero. The camera would follow the cables from the
cramped room--13 Cuban musicians jammed in a room that wouldn't fit five
Americans!--out to the porch, where the roadies and techs are busy tweaking
something on the big mixer because all the gear is a mix of decent parts and
horrible parts, quarter-inch cables held together with used tape, Roland
keyboards wobbling on rusted stands.
Here's where the camera would pan way out, from
that house in the Santo Suárez neighborhood, downhill past the official state
recording studio, past the House of Music on Neptune Street, catching everyone's
hips as it goes, until the whole crumbling metropolis is swaying to this
montuno, all the way down to the Malecón on the sea, where the world's most
humid block party unfolds on the esplanade, the way it does every evening of the
summer, just across the Florida Straits from the big enemigo.
That way, the video could end on one of those sly
gibes that made Cuban salsa the most heroic art form on the island through the
1990s. To pan the camera toward the Florida Straits is to raise a question that
can't be asked out loud: Is this the year for change? Quizás, they say in Cuba:
maybe. Quizás the new U.S. President will end the blockade. Quizás Raúl Castro,
who just celebrated his first Independence Day as President, will be a big
reformer. He's showing small signs that he might: some workers now get paid
based on performance, those who can afford cell phones can legally own them, and
since October some farmers can lease their own land. But maybe those reforms are
just a feint, and the big picture will stay pretty much the way it
is.
The video could tease at all that, but of course,
there is no video. This is Cuba, 2008. For most people, there's still not much
besides sugar, pork and 1956 Chevrolets. This band practicing in the cramped
living room--Los Reyes '73 (the Kings of '73)--was famous decades ago but
traveled so much abroad that it fell out of the limelight. Now the band has new
members, neither well-off nor famous: just another group of ridiculously skilled
Cubans trying to hit a seam in a tightening music market.
I've known Oscar Muñoz, the lead singer, for a long
time. In 1999, in the middle of a short and ill-fated career as a saxophone
player, I was one of a wave of American musicians who made the pilgrimage to
Havana. I was a worse player than most, but luck was with me--I quickly fell in
with Oscar and a traditional band called El Septeto Tipico de la Habana. I
played out the summer at their regular gigs in the mansion district called
Vedado, west of the old city.
What I remember from 1999 was the ubiquity of
music: everywhere, every day, in clubs at night and on the Malecón in the
mornings--music. At González Coro hospital in Vedado, where my wife was working
for the summer, surgeons broke out a boom box in between patients and invited
nurses and med students alike for an impromptu salsa session. Dance, sing,
smile, repeat: the cultural cure for whatever ailed the revolution.
This outlet, though, may be in danger. Cuba is
restless; increasingly, just a flick of the hips and a ready melody aren't
enough. And under the surface, Cuba is already changing--it's closer than ever
to the U.S. but also closer than ever to losing its cultural patrimony.
President-elect Barack Obama is hoping that small moves will help open up Cuba
from the inside. During the campaign, he stopped short of calling for an end to
the embargo but pledged to make it easier for Cuban Americans to travel and send
money to Cuba. But one way or the other, change is coming to Cuba, and if the
island is going to preserve its identity, it will need its music more than ever.
But will my friends even be there to set the drama to song?
Defending the Music
Oscar sees his current band's mission as simple:
defending the Cuban sound. In 10 to 15 years, adds the bandleader Jesús, there
won't be any Cuban music left on the island. It will all be in foreign
countries, stagnant nostalgia acts like the kind that spun off from the Buena
Vista Social Club album. That seems a dire prediction, but a Thursday night in
Havana makes you wonder how Cuban music will survive. On Avenue G, the roqueros
gather to get high and watch rock videos on makeshift outdoor screens. On the
Malecón in front of a gas station, a band called Aria thrashes out garage rock
for a small crowd outside while upstairs at the Jazz Café a saxophone player
named César López heats up the stage with squealing Ornette Coleman riffs. More
ominous to the salseros is the Riviera, Meyer Lansky's citadel to Vegas chic in
Havana. The Cuban-music venue inside is shuttered, but in the front bar, there's
house music mmph-ing loudly, and there's a line of wealthy young Cubans waiting
to get inside--girls in high heels and pert dresses, guys with Kanye West shades
and perfectly pressed wide collars. These smart-set Habaneros are called Mickeys
because, people like to say, they live in a cartoon world.
The Mickeys may be a minority, but more and more
clubs are turning to house or techno instead of live music. And radio and TV
stations--all government-run--are playing less timba, the Cuban version of
salsa. These are the multiple threats: rock, electronica and, the biggest danger
of them all, reggaeton--the Latinized hip-hop that has infiltrated from Puerto
Rico, New York City and the Dominican Republic.
"I have nothing against reggaeton," one of my
friends told me in a typical refrain. "It's just not Cuban. And it's not music."
Those are strong words, and Cuban hip-hop artists would argue that their music
is edgier and more political. But for indigenous, righteous, complex and
complete music, there is nothing like Cuba's timba. It has been a vital outlet
for taking on taboos, like Los Van Van's early critique of rampant prostitution
in a 1996 song about papayas: go ahead, they sang, touch it; it's a national
product. During the economic crisis following the Soviet collapse, music was the
one thing that held the island together, a common passion for both
revolutionaries and reactionaries. The government understood its power; that's
why supergroup La Charanga Habanera was banned for months in the '90s after
using a military helicopter to drop the group onstage for a stripteasing,
innuendo-filled concert on national TV. It was, someone clearly decided, too
decadent, too American.
The U.S. embargo, like all grand schemes that seek
to upend geography and history, is a porous affair. Rural U.S. lawmakers looking
for new agricultural markets have made America the No. 1 exporter of food to
Cuba. Grey's Anatomy and House were among the most popular shows in Havana this
summer. Those who have money (often from family in the States) are scrambling to
get converters to prepare for next February's conversion to all-digital TV
signals.
And Cuba is cracking up from the inside. I came
here to find the band, but not only did it split up (Oscar joined Los Reyes long
after leaving El Septeto), but most of its members don't even live in Cuba
anymore. Jorge and Piri, who played bass and drums, live near Cancún. They've
got a regular gig at a Cuban-themed bar; Jorge married the bleached-blond singer
who fronts the band, which now calls itself La Barbie de la Salsa. George works
in Mexico City as a producer and guitarist with Margarita Vargas Gaviria, known
throughout Mexico as the Goddess of the Cumbia.
I tracked Eddy, the flute player, to an apartment
in Guadalajara, Mexico's second largest city. He hasn't seen his family in two
years. Every Tuesday he goes to the immigration office to try to get temporary
visas to bring them to Mexico. But the Mexican bureaucrats keep asking for
bribes. And he's not sure how his wife would even adjust--she's too communist,
he says, laughing. She would miss her friends and co-workers in Cuba too much.
For her part, she told me when I visited her in Santa Clara that she always knew
it would be this way: marrying a Cuban musician is like marrying a soldier or a
doctor, she said. They're always on call; they're always overseas.
Wary of the World
Damaris was one of the dancers who used to perform
with our band--more than 40 years after the Mafia quit Havana, some Cubans still
like their music accompanied by girls in slinky sequined outfits with tail
feathers. Damaris and the drummer, Piri, wound up having a daughter together but
eventually divorced. He moved to Mexico, found a new wife and had another child.
So Damaris is raising their child alone in a small apartment in the shadow of
the capitol.
An afternoon with her is a long walk through the
schizophrenia of the Cuban economy, still caught in the maw of the U.S. blockade
and hampered by its own gross inefficiency. At an open-air market behind the
capitol, mangoes, okra, guavas and limes are everywhere--and cheap. Good thing
too because most Cubans earn from $15 to $25 a month and survive off the ration
books that offer them sugar, rice, beans and (only for the elderly) cigars. But
to get past subsistence, you need to shop at the air-conditioned hard-currency
stores. That's where Damaris goes to find a specialized nail clipper she needs
for the manicurist test she's taking the following week. But it costs nearly
$20, three times what it would in the U.S. A knockoff 26-in. (65 cm) "PanaBlack"
TV--one of those outdated crt behemoths--is listed at over $750. It's the result
of a supply chain gone insane. Chinese influence is everywhere here--from the
ubiquitous Yutong buses to the new renovations financed by the Chinese at Lenin
Park on the outskirts of town and the three channels of Chinese state-run
television that play in Havana hotel rooms. But unlike in the U.S., China hasn't
flooded the island with cheap consumer goods--at least not cheap
enough.
Back at Damaris' apartment, we sit at the table and
pick stones out of the red beans she bought: the vendors put pebbles in to drive
up their margins. The mix today is about one part rocks, four parts beans.
Damaris shrugs. "You wake up thinking about where to get breakfast, you eat
breakfast thinking about where to get lunch, and on it goes," she says. "To be
Cuban is to be tired."
She says that earlier this year, 19 teenagers went
missing from her neighborhood. They had made a pact to leave Cuba by raft.
Months later, not one of them had called to say they had arrived in the States.
The mothers in the neighborhood knew their children had drowned.
However Cuba changes, there will be difficult times
with its neighbor to the north. Even before the murderous enticement of
Washington's wet-foot, dry-foot policy that rewards Cubans who survive the trip
across the waters with citizenship (while denying many visa requests made
through proper channels in Havana)--even before Fidel Castro--relationships have
been uneasy between Cuba and the U.S., which essentially colonized the island
after Spain left in 1898. There was the U.S. administrator who in the early
1900s announced plans to "whiten" the population. And the 1901 Platt Amendment,
which helped carve the U.S. Naval Base at Guantánamo out of Cuban territory. But
Cuban outrage never extinguished the lure of the north for ordinary Cubans. And
given the state of Cuba's economy, bedazzlement with the outside world is as
strong as ever. A common joke: A little boy is asked in Havana what he wants to
be when he grows up. He thinks for a moment before answering, I want to be a
foreigner!
Common Ground
Hanry (not a misspelling--just typically
improvisational Cuban nomenclature) played the tres, a sort of Cuban mash-up
between a lute and a guitar, in our band. He had his chance at being a
foreigner, at least temporarily. It was the end of the band's last international
tour, and he was offered a rich, steady gig in Munich. He says that only loyalty
to the group brought him back home. But as soon as they got back, the band
absconded to Mexico. Some say Hanry started drinking after that; he says he was
just disgusted with the betrayals. Whatever the backstory, Hanry, a powerful and
precise player in his prime, left music altogether for a few years.
He's getting back into it now, despite the constant
anxiety over money. He plays for tourists in Old Havana but earns just a few
dollars a night. The strings for his instrument are made out of recycled
telephone wire; he cuts his guitar picks from shampoo bottles. He is still
restless, eager for an upgrade in life.
The whole island feels on a similar knife's edge.
Should Raúl Castro weaken, there are still a dozen aging Ahmed Chalabis waiting
in Miami to return from exile and divide the spoils among themselves. Should
there be rebellion in the streets in Havana, there's still a state militancy
that could bring blood to the Malecón. But the new generation of Cubans both
here and abroad are of a milder bent, with gentler aspirations. A cabdriver I
met launched into a familiar refrain: most of his family fled to Tampa when
Fidel Castro stole their lands. So was he--or his family in Florida--waiting to
take the land back, to evict those who live there now? "No," he said, "we're all
tired of thinking about fighting." His younger relatives in Florida have
forgotten to be angry. More and more Cubans are looking for common
ground.
Late in my travels, I was on a rural highway on the
way to Santa Clara, crammed in the backseat with Oscar, his wife Yusimi and
their radiant daughter Zenia, 5. We'd been out late dancing a few nights
earlier, and Yusimi was giving me a postmortem on my performance. (Her bemused
verdict: "You have Caribbean feet, but I have no idea what your butt is doing.")
Just then, "La Jinetera" by the staunchly anti-Castro Miami singer Willy Chirino
came through the speakers. It must have been the driver's CD--the song would
never have been allowed on state-run radio. Chirino, a Cuban-born exile, has
always been a little too naked in his politics for my tastes, and this song is
no different, a lament about a teenage hooker who's dismal in "a land where the
future jumped the wall and swam away." But Zenia was worried about none of that.
There's a particularly sweet chorus at the end of the song: "Oh Habana, oh
Habana." Zenia started singing along, in the same pure voice her father has. Let
the adults sweat their fevers; for her, this was a simple love letter to her
city. She doesn't need a music video; her Havana already has a sound
track.
