Buena Vista Social Club to Perform at the White House
Buena Vista Social Club to Perform at the White House
By Judy Cantor-Navas | October 13, 2015 4:53 AM EDT
Buena Vista Social Club will perform at The White House on Oct. 15. The Cuban music veterans, who after almost 20 years of touring the world are on their farewell Adios tour in the U.S., will appear at a party to be attended by international diplomats on the closing day of Hispanic Heritage month, celebrating the 25th anniversary of the White House Initiative of Educational Excellence for Hispanics.
There could not be a more perfect end of an era for the orchestra members, who could be called diplomats themselves. In 1997, the Buena Vista Social Club album, spearheaded by U.K. label World Circuits Nick Gold and produced by American Ry Cooder, did what it would take President Obama two more decades to achieve. It broke through the Cuban embargo, through music, reaching out and creating a relationship with the American people on a massive level.
The record, and more so, the concerts that would follow, including one at Carnegie Hall, gave forbidden fruit a folksy face, in the form of a band of senior citizens with incredible charm and irresistible old songs. The fact that Buena Vistas traditional repertoire did not reflect what was actually popular in Havana at the time didnt matter in the end. The recording session, for which Cuban bandleader Juan de Marcos Gonzalez called in a bunch of marvelous but mostly forgotten artists at Cooders request, turned out to be a brilliant way to reconnect the shared past of Cuba and the United States.
Making history was not always easy. In 1998, Compay Segundo, the craggy country singer who emerged as the front man of the band, traveled to Miami with other Cuban musicians to perform at a Latin edition of the MIDEM music conference. The artists were received by Cuban exile protestors, and during the concert the hall had to be evacuated because of a bomb threat.
More:
http://www.billboard.com/articles/columns/latin/6723088/buena-vista-social-club-white-house
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