Encyclopedia of Latin American Popular Music

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Encyclopedia of Latin American Popular Music Page 54

by George Torres


  pointed references to Victoriano Huerta (1850–1916) and Venustiano Carranza

  (1859–1920), opposing leaders of the revolution. Recent examples of politically

  themed corridos include the narcorrido, which are ballads relating to drug traf-

  ficking. These songs, exemplified in the works of artists such as Chalino Sanchez

  and Los Tigres del Norte, speak approvingly about the Robin Hood-like deeds

  of famous drug traffickers, which also carry an antiimperialist or anti-U.S. senti-

  ment with them. A recent song by Los Tigres del Norte entitled “Las Mujeres de

  Juarez” laments with shame the violence toward women that exists in the border

  town Juarez, Chihuahua.

  There were several protest song movements from the 1960s that had lasting

  impact on the protest in Latin America. Besides having an inclination toward

  providing narrative commentary on political themes, these new song movements

  sought to distance themselves from American-influenced popular music of the

  1960s by embracing, studying, and performing regional folk music styles. Much

  of the groundwork for these movements was laid by Atahualpa Yupanqui, from

  a generation earlier, who had devoted his life to the collection of regional poetry

  and music by travelling all over the southern cone in an effort to preserve much of

  the region’s music and folklore. Yupanqui also wrote many poems and songs with

  themes of the regions nature, people, and social customs.

  Inspired by the work of Yupanqui, a younger generation of Argentine musicians

  met in Mendoza Argentine in 1963 to create the Manifiesto de fundación del Mov-

  imiento del Nuevo Cancionero (Manifesto on the Establishment of the New Song

  Movement). The group, which included poet Armando Tejada Gómez and singer

  Mercedes Sosa, sought to create a national song movement that was based on the

  regional and popular music and which would make the native folk music of Argen-

  tina an essential ingredient in this new song style. This appropriation of indigenous

  music would include instruments and forms borrowed from folkloric traditions, a

  practice that Yupanqui had started a generation earlier. By honoring the musical

  and artistic contributions of the Indian and the mestizo, the new song movements

  were aligning themselves with an historically oppressed and disenfranchised por-

  tion of the population. This sort of populist orientation would feed into the practi-

  tioners of the nueva canción movement in Chile.

  The nueva canción chilena (new Chilean song) song movement of the 1960s and

  early 1970s produced socially committed singers and performers who used folk-

  loric instruments and styles that would appeal to middle-class audiences, especially

  312 | Protest Song in Latin America

  students. Like the Argentine song movement, by using music from rural traditions,

  the artists were honoring the mestizo traditions of their culture’s past. Artists such

  as Violeta Parra and Victor Jara would make frequent use of rural dance rhythms

  such as cueca , zamba , and chacarera to infuse their music with a native sound, which had been previously looked down upon by elite social groups, who generally

  turned to European models of musical styles in their listening. In spite of their using

  folkloric dances as the musical basis for many of their compositions, the nueva can-

  ción repertoire was a listener’s genre and did not have a dance function. Perhaps the

  most influential aspect of the repertoire is the connection with leftist sentiments,

  especially those denouncing poverty and political injustices. By 1965, Parra, with

  the aid of her two children Angel and Isabel Parra, had laid the foundation for the

  nueva canción by founding two venues for nueva canción performance in Santiago,

  La Peña and la Carpa de la Reina, which became important meeting places for urban

  intellectuals and university students. Important songs by Violeta Parra include “Si

  Somos Americanos” (“If We Are Americans”) and “Gracias a la Vida” (“Thanks

  to Life”); the latter, which was written just before her death in 1967, has become

  an internationally popular song. After Parra’s death, the most notable spokesperson

  for nueva canción was Victor Jara, who through his outspoken commentaries in

  support of Chile’s oppressed (Jara was a member of the Chile’s Communist Party)

  and against human rights violations in Chile, became a highly outspoken cham-

  pion of the nueva canción movement. His song “Plegaria a un labrador” (“Prayer

  to a Worker”) is a call to the campesinos (peasant workers) to come together and

  unite to work for a better future through brotherhood of the common people. One

  of his most daring songs, “Preguntas por Puerto Montt” (“Questions about Puerto

  Montt”) not only decries the perpetrators who ambushed and killed innocent peas-

  ant squatters in that port city, but also names the person responsible, Edmundo

  Pérez Zujovic, in the text of his song.

  Because of the populist sentiments of nueva canción songs and performers, the

  movement was important in supporting the Popular Unity Coalition, and some of

  the songs used during the 1970 campaign that eventually put Salvador Allende in

  power became important staples of the repertoire. The Pinochet coup, which ef-

  fectively ended the Allende regime, resulted in bad times for practitioners of the

  genre. Many were imprisoned for their part in speaking against the government

  (Victor Jara was eventually tortured and executed), while others were forced to

  exile abroad. As a result the nueva canción became an underground movement that

  reemerged later as canto nuevo, a somewhat understated version of nueva canción

  which, because of the threatening political environment, resorted to a more meta-

  phorically cautious means of expressing political sentiments.

  During the 1960s in Cuba, much influenced by the nueva canción movement,

  a new form of Cuban song with a politically conscious expression began to form.

  Inspired by the American folk movement, these young singers were inspired by

  Protest Song in Latin America | 313

  American folk singers like Bob Dylan and used the guitar playing balladeer

  model, combining it with Cuban-inspired musical genres such as son and bo-

  lero to create a postrevolution style of Cuban song. As a result, this new version

  of politically enlightened folk singing, which aligned itself with an older tradi-

  tion of Cuban troubadours, Cuban trova , became a strong voice in the social con-

  sciousness of Latin America. Singers such as Pablo Milanes and Silvio Rodriguez

  came together at venues such as the now famous La Casa de Trova and Casa de

  las Americas to perform their music for other Havana students and intellectu-

  als who supported the ideals of the revolution. In spite of some early resistance

  to the movement on the part of the Cuban government, nueva trova eventually

  became a government-supported art form, and as the movement became more de-

  fined, performers became government employees who travelled around the world

  as Cuba’s cultural and social ambassadors. Rodriguez, in particular, has become ex-

  tremely popular throughout the Americas and in Europe, selling out large concert

  venues, and many of his songs, such as “Ojala,” “Playa giron,” an
d “Unicornio,”

  have become best sellers. Much inspired by Bob Dylan, Rodriguez’s lyrics are

  considered to be the Latin American counterpart to the former, because of the way

  he expresses themes ranging from nationalism, to love, to anti-imperialism, often

  using sophisticated metaphors to convey poignant criticism. Whereas the music

  of the nueva canción chilena exhibited strong musical ties to Andean folkloric

  tradition, the music of artists such as Rodriguez shows more of a cosmopoli-

  tan influence than having an overtly Cuban sound. Nevertheless, artists such as

  Milanes, who is a more versatile musician than Rodriguez, uses influences from

  popular genres from Latin America, as in the song “Son Para Despertar A Una

  Negrita,” which is in the clave rhythm of the Cuban son. A more recent exponent

  version of nueva trova, sometimes called novisima trova, is Carlos Varela, whose

  1989 album Jalisco Park at once supports socialist ideals but is also critical of his

  own country and the difficulties of Cuban life. Varela’s music is important from

  a post-Soviet era perspective, which resonates strongly with a younger Cuban

  audience.

  Because of the volatile political conditions that existed throughout different

  parts of Latin America from the 1960s to the present, there have been many ex-

  amples of protest song throughout the region. While many of the subgenres owe

  much to the earlier nueva canción chilena, its influence can be seen in the forma-

  tion of similar, yet locally relevant song repertoires in Mexico, Nicaragua, Costa

  Rica, Puerto Rico, and Haiti. Inspired by the revolution against the Samoza re-

  gime in Nicaragua (1979), there evolved a particularly unique style of protest song

  that became associated with the support of the Sandinista movement. In particu-

  lar, the folkloric sounds of brothers Carlos and Luis Enrique Mejía Godoy repre-

  sented a timely, albeit dated, example of the unique social relevance of this music

  directed toward workers and revolutionaries. One of Carlos’s songs, “El garand,”

  314 | Protest Song in Latin America

  El Gran Combo de Puerto Rico

  The legendary Puerto Rican salsa orchestra, El Gran Combo de Puerto Rico

  (EGC), formed in 1962. Its original members included Rafaél Ithier and Eddie

  Perez, both of whom had performed with the band of Rafael Cortijo. Ithier

  and company developed a new repertoire and format, playing salsa music with

  a percussion-centered orchestral ensemble featuring two pianos, two saxo-

  phones, two trumpeters, three vocalists and later, trombone. EGC perfor-

  mances are typically large, carefully choreographed stage shows, featuring a

  solo singer or dancer. Although they have dipped into other Latin styles such

  as boogaloo , tangos , and timba, they have always returned to salsa.

  EGC’s song lyrics encompass themes from Puerto Rican folklore as well

  as love, food, drinking, and partying. EGC, always based in Puerto Rico, has

  maintained a consistent tipico sound ensuring them a loyal Puerto Rican fol-

  lowing. EGC has had signifi cant personnel changes over the past 40 years and

  the band members’ ages span the generations as does their fan base. EGC has

  toured internationally and received awards and recognition.

  Further Reading

  Randel, Don Michael. “Crossing over with Rubén Blades.” Journal of the Ameri-

  can Musicological Society 44, no. 2 (Summer, 1991): 301–23.

  Rebecca Stuhr

  gives detailed instructions on how to assemble a rifle, thus providing valuable

  information for the unschooled revolutionary. In Haiti, Manno Charlemagne and

  his style of protest song known as mizik angaje ([politically] engaged music) sang

  about the injustice of Haiti’s poor and oppressed population. His music so out-

  raged the Duvalier regime in the 1980s that he was forced to exile to the United

  States. Nevertheless, his popularity was supported by a large diaspora population,

  and after the ouster of Duvalier in 1986, he returned to Haiti, where his politi-

  cally engaged music played an important role in the support and election of Jean-

  Bertrand Aristide in 1990.

  Further Reading

  Luft, Murray. “Latin American Protest Music: What Happened to The New Songs?”

  Canadian Folk Music Bulletin (Bulletin de musique folklorique canadienne) 30, no. 3 (Sep-

  tember 1, 1996): 10.

  Manuel, Peter. Popular Musics of the Non-Western World: An Introductory Survey. New

  York: Oxford University Press, 1988.

  Puerto

  Rico

  |

  315

  Moore, Robin. Music and Revolution: Cultural Change in Socialist Cuba . Berkeley:

  University of California Press, 2006.

  Reyes Matta, Fernando. “ ‘New Song’ and Its Confrontation in Latin America.” In Marx-

  ism and the Interpretation of Culture, edited by Cary Nelson and Lawrence Grossberg. Ur-

  bana: University of Illinois Press, 1988.

  Schechter, John Mendell. Music in Latin American Culture: Regional Traditions. New

  York: Schirmer Books, 1999.

  George Torres

  Puerto Rico

  Puerto Rico is a Spanish-speaking U.S. territory (4,448 sq. mi.; pop. 3,725,789 in

  2010) located about 90 miles east of the Dominican Republic. In the United States,

  the number of Puerto Ricans is estimated at nearly 4.2 million. A product of cease-

  less migrations—traced back to its pre-colonial times—Puerto Rico’s distinctive

  musical genres include the early portorrico de los negros and coquis notated by

  Mexican scholars and, in the recent era, the popular bomba (in its various styles),

  danza, plena , and reggaetón. Especially with the New York-based salsa , Puerto Rican musicians are known for their versatility and adaptability in fields like jazz

  performance, arrangements, stylistic fusion, and mass production.

  Manuel G. Tavárez (1843–1883) and Juan Morel Campos (1857–1896) are the

  first known composers to have developed the danza as an export commodity en-

  joying popularity and prestige throughout the Caribbean and the United States. The

  countless of local danzas disseminated in the region by local publishing houses,

  tour orchestras, Spanish regimental bands, and world-ranked concert pianists since

  the 1870s heralded the period of copious musical production Puerto Rican musi-

  cians and composers have achieved from 1900 to the present.

  After the United States acquired Puerto Rico as a colony in 1898, their policy

  of Americanization was imposed to conform the island’s culture and society to na-

  tional standards.

  But national papers wrote about Puerto Rican music as “an amiable trait of char-

  acter that needs no Americanization” with emphasis on the danza , “a music of a

  distinctly high order.” Local danza recordings made in 1910 and 1917 called much

  of the national attention due in part to their renditions of clarinet and baritone horn

  improvisation that were, until then, rarely heard on cylinders. With the U.S. in-

  volvement in World War I in 1917, various Puerto Rican musicians were recruited

  in James Reese Europe’s 369th Regiment Hellfighters to create one of the best jazz

  bands of all times. At their return, the New York Times referred specifically to “the

  clarinet section, re
cruited from the Porto Rican Constabulary Band” as the special

  feature at a Hellfighters’s 1919 fund-raising concert in Carnegie Hall.

  316 | Puerto

  Rico

  Puerto Rican musicians enjoyed a reputation as sight readers. Envisioning new

  sounds for the upcoming postwar period, African American bandleaders in the

  1920s hired many of them, including jazz pioneer Ralph Escudero, Juan Tizol, and

  the well-known Rafael Hernández. The stylistic input these musicians exerted was

  felt in Negro musicals, Broadway pit ensembles, musical extravaganzas, in musi-

  cal genres like the danza -related ragtime, and what was then known as hot jazz .

  After 1900, as plena voiced the precarious conditions of working-class Puerto

  Ricans, many of them moved in increasing numbers to areas like Arizona, Con-

  necticut, Hawaii, and New York. With it, the center of musical production shifted

  from the island’s principal cities to the mainland.

  A study of Richard K. Spottswood’s near-exhaustive discography of recordings

  in the United States from 1898 to 1942 reveals that out of 119 major recording art-

  ists from Puerto Rico, 30 of them remained in the island contributing one-tenth

  of all record matrices produced by the other 89, who settled in the United States.

  After the 1927 introduction of sound cinema, local musicians employed in local

  silent film productions soon intensified their migration to exodus proportions. For a

  group of artists representing an island population one-100th that of Ibero-America

  and less than one-1000th of the world’s, it is staggering that at the time, this latter

  migratory group from Puerto Rico produced in the United States over 15 percent

  of the estimated number of record matrices by all Spanish and Latin Americans,

  and nearly 3.5 percent of production among all worldwide ethnic groups covered

  in the study.

  Modern Latin American popular music is mostly a product of the U.S.-based

  recording industry with a considerable influence from Puerto Rican musicians,

  especially after the mass production of electric records began around 1927. This

  new period was likely initiated by Rafael Hernández, whose career as one of Latin

  America’s prominent composers intensified after he formed the Trío Borinquen, a

 

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