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Cubarumba Tataguines in memoriam International Festival in its second edition.

Latin America / Cuba / La Habana

The National Center for Popular Music invites you to participate in the Cubarumba Tataguines in memoriam International Festival in its second edition.

It will be held in Havana from June 28-30, 2019. With the aim of Honoring the memory of Tata güines, Stimulating the artistic creation of rumba groups from the community, encouraging children’s projects based on the folkloric and musical genre, highlight the social value of the rumba as intangible heritage of humanity.

Asocosalsa Cuba
Asocosalsa Cuba

Likewise, to carry out a national and international workshop based on the pedagogical need to strengthen cultural nationality by art students in Cuba on the basis of the figure of tata güines, the fundamental foundation that promoted the proclamation of Rumba as Intangible Heritage of Humanity. . With this goal we urge all young people, students who wish to participate in the Festival through the following themes:

Themes:

  1. Cultural educational practices
  2. Potential value of transformation of the percussive theory of Tata güines.
  3. Main factors that slow down or facilitate the descending of the Rumba genre as a percussion modality.
  4. Ethical and aesthetic values ​​promoted by the practice of percussion
  5. Challenges to perfect percussive techniques
  6. Creation and promotion of Cuban art
  7. Young rumbero, possibility of cultural advancement. Harvested experiences and challenges for the present and immediate future.
  8. Others

The venue will take place at the Turf Night Club

General program:

Press conference

Thursday, June 13, 2019

Venue: El Turf Night Club

Address: F Street between Calzada and Quinta Vedado

Time: 2pm

Participation: Press-Radio-Television-Guests

Duration: 1h

toast to daddy

Place House Museum Tata güines

TIME: 3 PM

Event schedule:

Thursday, June 27

  • 8:00 Opening Gala Avellaneda Hall of the National Theater

Cast Subject to change

  • Tata guines Jr.
  • Makuta Flow
  • Rumbansoc
  • Ronald and his Rumbera explosion
  • Denis and his swing
  • Vania Borges
  • Iannna Wobble

Friday, June 28

Venue: Club Noturno El Turf

  • 9:00 Inaugural Conference
  • 10:00 Recess
  • 10:30 Percussion and dance workshops
  • 12:30 Demonstration group
  • 1:30 Visit Tata Guines House Museum
  • 2:00 Lunch

Cultural

Devil Tun Tun: 4pm to 6pm.

Show Woman in the rumba

Omini Bata-Rumba Morena

  • 6:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tataguines/Ochareo Group
  • 10-2am Venue: Club Norturno El Turf Shows with rumba groups

Explosion Rumbera/Rumbavila/Rumbansoc/

Saturday, June 29

Venue: Club Noturno El Turf

  • 9:00 Inaugural Conference
  • 10:00 Recess
  • 10:30 Percussion and dance workshops
  • 12:30 Demonstration group
  • 2:00 Lunch

Cultural

  • 3:00 Clave de Rumba folkloric ensemble / children’s project.
  • 8pm-2am Venue: El Turf Timbalaye Nightclub /Rumberos de Cuba/Rumbansoc/ Tata güines

Sunday, June 30

Venue: El Turf Night Club

  • 9:00 Report of the event. Delivery of Certificates.
  • 10:00 Recess
  • 10:30 Symposium Asocosalsa Cuba
  • 5:00 Cinema Avenue Closing Gala
  • 10:00 Final reception.

Festival Project

Event Organizing Committee:

Víctor Rodríguez García: Executive Director

Arturo Soto Martínez: Chairman of the Event

Suset Núñez Vázquez: CNMP Events Coordinator

Osorio García Rule: CNMP Events Department

Brigitte Oliva: General Producer

Principal Cubarumba
Principal Cubarumba

Company National Center for Popular Music

INTRODUCTION

The Cubarumba 2019 Tata güines in memoriam project is a previous interactive festival that consists of pedagogical, competitive, sociocultural moments that will transfer original Cuban music, through percussion and dance workshops, interaction with the community, as well as shows of this genre, intangible heritage of the humanity, the evident and permanent need to rescue Cuban roots, and the representation of the name Tata güines, a national and international figure. Following this trilogy as a cultural line, the president of the festival Arturo Soto Martínez advocates for this event.

Carrying out research, it is verified that this festival has a high tourist level, which causes a useful strategy to penetrate tourists about our idiosyncrasy and traditions, in addition to giving an unforgettable moment to all those who are present at that moment.

If we observe the social gaze, we realize the motivation of society in general since we encourage in the community a hope of cultural revival, a festival of inclusion in all senses since people of all ages and disabilities participate. Achieving a mutual interaction that achieves as a result an inclusion of this musical genre in daily life and in the tastes of all the people who enjoy it.

It is emphasized that times are changing, however it is important to take actions so that the celebrations of our origin are not forgotten, it is about looking for very frequent actions that work with everyday life, exclusivity, professionalism and good taste that keep this celebration alive. choice for youth not only in our country but around the world

For all the above, the need for this culturally artistic project becomes evident, specifically in these places where a large foreign crowd is concentrated, since it is unaware of Cuban culture. Relying on the battle of ideas that we have daily for the rejection of national identity, this project that settles the roots, that remembers the past, that discloses our present and that above all that is written increases love is evident, permanent and necessary. for Cuban culture.

DEVELOPING

  • Goals:
    • Honor the memory of Tata güines
    • Stimulate the artistic creation of rumba groups from the community
    • Encourage children’s projects based on the folkloric and musical genre.
    • Highlight the social value of the rumba as intangible heritage of humanity

Themes:

  1. Cultural educational practices
  2. Potential value of transformation of the percussive theory of Tata güines.
  3. Main factors that slow down or facilitate the descending of the Rumba genre as a form of percussion.
  4. Ethical and aesthetic values ​​promoted by the practice of percussion
  5. Challenges to perfect percussive techniques
  6. Creation and promotion of Cuban art
  7. Young rumbero, possibility of cultural advancement. Harvested experiences and challenges for the present and immediate future.
  8. Others

PARTICIPATION METHOD

  • Delegates
  • Student
  • Musicians
  • Guests

REGISTRATION FEES: DELEGATES

Foreigners………………50 cuc includes participation in the event, certificate and/or credits.

Cubans …………………….250 cup includes food, participation, certification and/or credits

Cuban students ……………..125 cup includes food, participation, certification and/or credits

PROJECT OBJECTIVES

GENERAL OBJECTIVE

Carry out an international rumba festival based on the artistic value of the figure of tata güines in the world on the basis of the Rumba proclamation as Intangible Heritage of Humanity

Goals:

  • Honor the memory of Tata güines
  • Stimulate the artistic creation of rumba groups from the community
  • Encourage children’s projects based on the folkloric and musical genre.
  • Highlight the social value of the rumba as intangible heritage of humanity
Specific Objectives Actions Indicators Participants Responsible
Honor the memory of Tata güines Hold the Cubarumba Tataguines Festival in memoriam Conciliation Company, Sponsors, Organizing Committee Event Leader
Stimulate the artistic creation of rumba groups from the community Theoretical-practical dance and percussion workshops, presentation of youth groups in event activities Conciliation with Artex, Egrem. Cuban and foreign population Org Committee
Encourage children’s projects based on the folkloric and musical genre.

 

Activity in the National Folkloric Ensemble of Cuba, headquarters for the socialization of children’s projects Address of Palenque, Production Org Committee Event Leader
Highlight the social value of the rumba as intangible heritage of humanity Activity the woman in the rumba, the longest rumba, the rumba and its youth, the rumba does include you Group Directors Production Event Leader

 

Tata Guines No 1
Tata Guines No 1

Beneficiary population:

Directly, the population that benefits is Cuban and foreign, since in some way the project is aimed at educating, including, transforming the culture of these times that affects this population.

For this, their full participation is needed, in the first order the attention that is very important, then the interest in dance and percussion and the decline that forms the taste for this musical genre.

Also highlighting the importance of the social inclusion of people with disabilities, we can mention that the festival has the honor of promoting groups with different disabilities. Example of the incursion of culture in Cuba.

 

Los Van Van and their 50th Anniversary

North America / USA / New York

Los Van Van returns to Lehman Center Performing Arts to celebrate their 50th Anniversary

For this special concert the Cuban legendary orchestra will join with the most popular lead Los Van Van vocalists: Mario “Mayito” Rivera and Pedro Calvo

Date: Saturday, June 1st

Show: 8:00PM

Cost: $50 – $100

Venue: 250 Bedford Park Boulevard West Bronx, New York 10468

Low cost onsite parking available for $5!

Los Van Van in concert
Los Van Van in concert

Lehman Center for the Performing Arts presents the return of Grammy-winning dance orchestra, Formell y Los Van Van, who bring direct from Cuba their blend of Afro-Cuban, disco and funk back to Lehman Center to celebrate their 50th Anniversary on Saturday, June 1st at 8PM.

Heralded as Cuba’s greatest dance orchestra known worldwide for their iconic live performances, Formell y Los Van Van features three of the late founder Juan Formell‘s children: Samuel Formell (Leader and Drummer/Timbalero) , Juan-Carlos Formell  (Bassist)  and the family’s youngest daughter, Vanessa Formell (lead vocalist).

BIO: Formell y Los Van Van, nicknamed the “Cuban Music Train,” is regarded as one of the most influential bands in the history of 20th century Cuban popular music. Founded in 1969 by Juan Formell when he was 27 years old, the band pioneered Songo, a hybrid rhythm that blended Cuba’s native folkloric son music with the go-go of the 1970s and has electrified dance floors in Havana for over forty-five years.

The band’s original members were: Juan Formell (bandleader, bass player, and songwriter), Cesar “Pupy” Pedroso (piano, songwriter), and Jose Luis “Changuito” Quintana (drums and timbales). Each one were music conservatory trained from a young age and were fascinated with the soul, go-go and disco music that dominated U.S. radio.

They named their dance band “Los Van Van” (which literally means “they go-go”) after the go-go fad, and pioneered the hybrid of son and go-go music – Songo – which can now be found throughout Latin jazz, pop, and world fusion.

And if the genius of Songo wasn’t enough, they also developed the complex rhythmic style that became known as Timba that was adapted by other bands in the ‘90s. Los Van Van soon became one of the best-known Cuban groups in the world, maintaining a loyal fan base throughout Latin America, Europe and Japan propelled by hits such as: “La Sandunguera,” “Anda, Ven y Muévete,” “Te Traigo” and “Yuya Martinez.”

Pedrito Calvo
Pedrito Calvo

In 1993, Changuito left the band and was replaced by Formell’s son Samuel who also proved to be an outstanding composer as evidenced by the song: “Te Pone La Cabeza Mala”, the title track of one of their best albums.  Although American politics hindered their ability to break into the U.S. market, their popularity in the U.S. grew throughout the ’90s, and the band toured the U.S. for the first time in 1997, including a memorable concert at Lehman Center.

Two years later, Los Van Van was honored with the GRAMMY® Award for Best Salsa Performance for their fifteenth album, Llegó…Van Van — Van Van is Here and in 2013, the Latin Recording Academy awarded Juan Formell with a special Grammy for a Lifetime Achievement of Artistic Excellence.

With over 40 albums to their credit, Formell y Los Van Van’s 2015 album Homenaje A Juan Formell: La Fantasia, was 80% completed at the time of Juan Formell’s death in 2014 and was finished under the direction of his son Samuel with another son, Juan-Carlos Formell.

The album’s release on Reyes Records in December, 2014 was on the 45th anniversary of the band’s founding and it features several of the band’s hit dance tracks refreshed with contemporary arrangements as well as many new songs including the widely popular: “Somos Diferentes”, “Todo se Acabó” and “La Moda”. Sony Music released it worldwide in 2016 and it earned a 2017 Grammy nomination for the Best Tropical Latin Album.

The group’s most recent album “Los Van Van son La Patria” is scheduled to be released on Cuba’s Engrem label later this summer.

Mario Mayito Rivera
Mario Mayito Rivera

BIO: Mario “Mayito” Rivera is nicknamed “El Poeta de La Rumba” for his ability to vocally interpret all forms of Cuban music in both modern and traditional styles with a colorful range that can be powerfully dynamic or tender and soft.

He was born in Pinar del Rio, Cuba, and has degrees from both the Escuela Nacional de Arte and the Instituto Superior de Arte. After college, he joined the band of Cuban singer Albita Rodríguez and played bass in Grupo Moncada.

From 1992 to 2011, Mayito was the characteristic voice and face of the extremely successful Cuban band, Los Van Van. He sang many of the band’s salsa hits, for which he was rewarded with a Latin GRAMMY® and two nominations.

Bio: Pedro “Pedrito” Calvo is a popular Cuban-born vocalist known for his charismatic and unique singing style which often includes clever word play and expressive rhythmic vocal sounds. Pedrito started his professional career singing with his father’s orchestra and years after with several Cuban orchestras including:

La Riviera, La Orquesta de Julio Valdés, and La Ritmo Oriental with hits such as: “Mi Socio Manolo” and “Aquí el que Manda es Mulé”. He was the most famous for his time (1974-2001) with Los Van Van, where he was part of the infamous lead singing trio of Los Van Van along with Mayito Rivera and Roberto Hernández.

Event Details:
www.LEHMANCENTER.org

”Alma Del Barrio” celebrates 50 years of operation

The United States has a great number of Latin music radio programs that always sought to promote the best of Latin talent through their frequencies and one of them is ”Alma Del Barrio” of the well-known radio station KXLU, which is celebrating its 50th anniversary.   

Against all odds, ”Alma Del Barrio” celebrates five decades on the air after all the effort of its hosts and the team involved in such a noble and necessary feat. We say ”against all odds” because it is not common that projects submitted by university students did not used to last long and ended up being replaced by programs of the same style.  

In addition to the above, decades-long programs usually have a single host and comfortable time slots each week. However, ”Alma Del Barrio” was the exception to this rule and, today, continues to prove that limits can be overcome.  

Founders of Alma Del Barrio
Founders of ”Alma Del Barrio” Steve Lopez, Enrique ”Kiki” Soto, Gustavo Aragon, Eddie Lopez, and Hector ”La Voz” Resendez

Beginnings of ”Alma Del Barrio” 

After so long, ”Alma Del Barrio” has remained up to date and continues to keep people’s taste.  

Its main founders were Enrique ”Kiki” Soto and the late Raúl Villa, who at the time were two young students with many ideas and eager to achieve interesting things. The program was aired for the first time in 1973. A few years later, Hector Resendez, a freshman in college, contacted Enrique and Raul in order to write an article about this new radio show, but it would not be long before he joined the main founders in the project they were developing.   

Three years later, in 1976, student at Loyola Marymount University Eddie Lopez joined the program on the third anniversary of ”Alma Del Barrio”, show in which he would spend the next 46 years bringing the best Afro-Cuban music to the audience every Sunday between 2pm and 6pm.  

On a number of occasions, Resendez said that ”Alma Del Barrio” was not created to be hosted by great famous personalities, but by dynamic young people who wanted to be part of a small team that was just starting operations.   

At the beginning, the new hosts only had one hour of broadcast time to show what they were made of, but at the same time, they did their best to get more airtime and have more presenters in the program. They wanted to include a not very popular genre on the station at that time, which was salsa, something totally innovative for the station. 

In those years, salsa was understood as that set of genres coming from Afro-Cuban music and the novice hosts thought it would be a fine attraction to the Latino communities of Los Angeles. That set of genres came from Cuba, Puerto Rico, Panama, Colombia and the Dominican Republic. This is when record labels and music promoters renamed these rhythms as ”salsa” in order to make it easier for programs and hosts to identify the music.  

Eddie Lopez in Alma Del Barrio
Eddie Lopez working on the radio station

‘’Alma Del Barrio”’ programming 

The traditional programming of most of the stations consisted of jazz, rock and classical music, but then salsa was incorporated thanks to the increasing popularity that this genre was gaining. 

One thing Resendez said is that one of the most famous rock groups was Santana, so the announcer and the rest of his cabinmates were surprised that the musicians of the band knew so much about Afro-Cuban music in terms of percussion. Let us remember that the popular song ”Oye Como Va” was written by ”El Rey De Los Timbales” Tito Puente a decade and a half before the band recorded it.   

This union of rock and salsa was what gave the hosts the confidence to use trendy Anglo-Saxon genres as a means to promote Latin music.   

On top of that, the guys were clear that jazz fans would be receptive to Latin jazz, since great jazz musicians like Dizzy Gallespie hired Cuban percussionists in their orchestras. If on other stations, this music was successful, ”Alma Del Barrio” was no exception. Fortunately, they were not wrong.   

Logo of Alma Del Barrio
Current logo of ”Alma Del Barrio”

Last years of “Alma Del Barrio’’ 

During the last years of ”Alma Del Barrio”, the program team has made great efforts to join and create links with the community, whether it would be through sponsorships, advertisements, public services, donation campaigns, among other things.   

Through all this community service they offered, they also made their own work known and many listeners began to enjoy this great team’s talent while listening to good music and varied programming. 

The program has also been and is part of great annual and historical festivals such as the Salsa Fest. This day is always reserved for the audience to share with the new and old hosts of ”Alma Del Barrio” and many of the station staff, who always spread their enthusiasm to those present with their good energy.   

”Alma Del Barrio” and its hosts have brought joy to their followers, but there have also been some sad moments. One of them was the death of DJ Eddie Lopez in January 2023, leaving a great void in the station and the hearts of those who faithfully followed his career through the KXLU circuits during the last decades. 

Read also: Singer and manager of Cambalache Pancho Chavez 

Felipe Pirela | The Bolero of America

North America / USA / New York

Felipe Pirela:

En mi barrio el empedrao
Parroquia Santa Lucia
Había una barbería
Que era muy populachera
Te lavaban en ponchera
La silla se reclinaba
Y Luis el perro pelaba
Al son de una periquera

Felipe Pirela
Felipe Pirela

This is the sound of the tasty gaita performed by the group Sabor Gaitero and Los Gaiteros de Pillopo. It refers to a barbershop in a picturesque neighbourhood of Maracaibo in the Venezuelan state of Zulia. It was in this popular neighbourhood of Maracaibo, El Empedrao, that Felipe Antonio Pirela Morón was born in 1941. It was probably in this popular barbershop that he got his first haircut, and it was certainly in some corner of the neighbourhood that he took his first steps as a singer, perhaps interpreting gaitas or some other popular genre. The young Felipe was far from imagining that he would become “El Bolerista de América” (The Bolero of America).

The son of a bricklayer, Felipe Pirela Monsalve, and a housewife – an artist at heart – Lucia Morón de Pirela, the boy began his musical career as a child, supported by his mother, in small radio singing competitions. Incredibly, at the age of 13, together with some boys from the neighbourhood and his two brothers, he founded the group Los Happy Boys, which performed in various venues in Maracaibo, without even imagining that he would later become the main star of Billo’s Caracas Boys, a group that, upon arriving in Venezuela, debuted under the same name, Billo’s Happy Boys, directed by the Dominican maestro Billo Frometa.

At the beginning of his singing career, Felipe specialized as a bolerista, performing songs by prominent singers such as the Chilean Lucho Gatica, the Cuban bolerista Olga Gillot and Venezuela’s favorite tenor Alfredo Sadel.

Felipe Pirela
Felipe Pirela

Radio Caracas Television had the honor of making Felipe’s image public for the first time in 1957, through an amateur program in which Felipe placed third. Unfortunately, there were no video recording systems in those days, so there is no record of this historic achievement. Later, the now defunct and legendary Venezuelan regional television station from Maracaibo, Ondas del Lago, served as a springboard for Felipe, who was one of its founding artists.

These performances allowed him to sign a contract with the station in 1958, after which he moved to Caracas, where he performed on Radio Caracas and in various nightclubs.

Shortly thereafter, he returned to Maracaibo to join the orchestra Los Peniques, with whom he recorded his first album in 1960 and began his professional career.

Like most of the artists, baseball players and boxers from Maracaibo, Felipe was a man of humble origins, pobre del pobre, with limited economic resources, who for a time missed opportunities to be noticed despite his immense talent.

Felipe Pirela
Felipe Pirela

Fortune smiled on him when Maestro Billo Frometa heard him sing, at a time when the arranger, director and musician from Quisqueyano was preparing to restructure his band, Billo’s Caracas Boys, and at the same time hired another singer from Maracaibo, the remarkable José “Cheo” García. This hiring gave an enormous boost to the already famous Billo’s Caracas Boys; the band acquired great international prestige, performing throughout America and Europe, popularizing the immortal mosaics that for many years enlivened the parties and were the favorites of the Venezuelan public.

Not for nothing, Billo’s Caracas Boys Orchestra has been called the most popular in Venezuela, the Caracas and Venezuelan clubs, Latin American countries and even the European continent (Tenerife, Spain) showed full houses during the band’s performances. In these performances, the acclaim for Felipe Pirela was total. Huge demonstrations of support, full houses and legions of fans followed the “crooner” on his tours.

When Venezuela’s favorite tenor, Alfredo Sadel, left the popular genre and his country to devote himself to opera, Pirela almost immediately replaced him in the favorite place of Venezuelans.

In 1961, “El Bolerista de América” recorded with a string orchestra conducted by Billo, the long playing Canciones de Ayer, including old songs and songs of that time, a recording that marked his resignation and departure to Mexico, where he also had memorable successes.

Felipe Pirela boleros with guitars
Felipe Pirela boleros with guitars

In 1964 he married Mariela Montiel, a marriage that resulted in the birth of a daughter, Lennys, and in which La Retirada was quickly marked by the fact that Amor se Escribe con Llanto (Love is Written with Crying) and that it probably does not last a lifetime.

Canada and Mexico witnessed his successes in ’67 and his return to Venezuela. Successful performances in Miami that same year motivated him to reside in the United States, where he tried to structure his own record company, a project that came to nothing and he was deeply disillusioned and returned to Venezuela, later residing in Puerto Rico, where he was taking La Última Copa when he was tragically assassinated in 1972.

For some, his career was marked by Sombras Nada Más, but for the vast majority, “El Bolerista de America” remains in the memory as one of the most unique stars of Latin American music of all time.


For Mario Cabrera Bello

Mario Cabrera Bello


Brazil Directory 2024

Root Hookah Lounge
Root Hookah Lounge
Av. Professor Nilton Lins, 1591
Flores, Manaus AM, Brazil
+55 92 98144-8411

Bar Bip-bip Nightclub
Bar Bip-bip Rua
Rua Almirante Gonçalves 50, Loja D
Copacabana, Rio de Janeiro – RJ, 22060-040, Brazil
+55 21 2267-9696

Club Mix Bar
Club Mix Bar
Rua do Mercado, 25 – Centro
Rio de Janeiro – RJ, 20010-120, Brazil
+55 21 97614-6703

Rio Scenarium
Rio Scenarium
Pavilhão da Cultura Rua Lavradio 20 – Centro
Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil
+55 21 96550-0002

L'apero Bar and Restaurant
L’apero
Avenida Litorânea, 4A
65076-170 São Luís, MA, Brazil
+55 98 3227-8121

Azucar Club Latino
Azucar Club Latino
Rua Aspicuelta, 366
05433010 São Paulo, SP, Brazil
+55 11 3813-6858

Bona Casa de Musica
Bona Casa de Música
Rua Doutor Paulo Vieira 101
São Paulo, SP, 0 01257-00, Brazil
+55 11 3813-7773

 

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International Salsa Magazine (ISM) is a monthly publication about Salsa activities around the world, that has been publishing since 2007. It is a world network of volunteers coordinated by ISM Magazine. We are working to strengthen all the events by working together.