YOLANDA: a true history (English Version)





For those who do not know Yolanda ...





YOLANDA FOREVER





"Yolanda is much more than a muse. He touched the hard years, and without posing,levitated in the light of everyday life, there was drawn by hand, immortalized between the seventies and the Sea"

"... time passes ..."



One country, the film shot in black and white, which she helped to narrate voice Pablo Milanés, then no one so well known as today.

Three daughters, an apartment in El Vedado, visits, ash trays, guitars, problems and laughter, the troubadours, principals, community life. A world built with a soundtrack.

That life was born black and white a great love song, a hymn, the testimony of an era. In this life we were born black and white, the best witness of those songs and those women who remind us of who we are, if we forget for the moment, we recovered 
a chord.

It is impossible to tell the story of our parents, separate or scattered, united in the ground or in infinity, without singing this song, it is impossible not to swallow dry in front of our family photos, try to reconstruct the idea of eternity without ruminating "I was a declaration of love. "

"I was the girl he fell in love and could have been another, I do not have any personalmerit, talent of course it is
."



This says Yolanda Benet always talking about his song and his eternal and indestructible bond with Pablo MilanésShe is much more than a muse, and has been escaped as a journalist or photographer has been able, among other things, manipulation and understanding, and because the art of love is in present continuous. Yolanda does not live caught between the strings of a song. Yolanda is much more and always knew Paul. His eternity is the great treasure that protects it.

Cuban, sweet, charismatic, witty and above all: Cienfuegos to the core. Yolanda comes from a city called "La Perla del Sur". Village founded by the French women are born there are graceful, refined, swimming and an open notion and visionary in the world because the port and the blue green lead and bring the certainty that the horizon ispassable and it all depends on your ideas clear to cross the water clarity.

As she herself told me, the first song I heard from Pablo Milanés was very popular and sang as part of the group "The Buccaneers", in the early 60's, called you away. She meets Milan in November 1968, then worked at (ICAIC) Cuban Institute of Cinematographic Art and Industry, and listening to live realizes that this composer, just 23 years, there seemed to anything that sounded here at that time, had something different. First met her voice, then he appeared.




It was a time where for the Cubans to see the great troubadours downloading in parks or in the rooms of the houses was natural. Life flowed another way, more lyrical, I think.


They met through a friend who treasured a tape with all the songs that Paul was singing in those days and never tire of hearing them over and over again. She fell in love with the voice and the songs, but Paul had never seen, until one day that friend takes him to the door of his house.


Yolanda remembers that moment as if today was the day of the first meeting to begin production of the film: The first machete charge. At last they know, and as already discussed the idea that he could make music for this new film spent the night talking of the subject. She confesses that Paul thought impossible was going on military service and had no idea that he would go to work. 


Yolanda is very enterprising and positive, made some arrangements so that he could be achieved, it did, once he began to collaborate with them in the film, composed four themes that told the story, his evocation of the war 95. Singing, filming, composing traveling around the island, intimate and much more is known.


Then Paul was a boy in uniform, a recruit, an ordinary man, but his heartbeat Yolanda told her she was not just any man, ever came to him deeply, even without seeing it. She was also a girl who worked at the ICAIC, but his sensibility guided with certainty.


He said then he was very rebellious, that everything was difficult in the beginning.


"Yes, I understand he spent a very bad stage, he was badly beaten and was and is very rebellious. Life has given him beautiful things, his children, his career. He had moments when I was crushing pain, sadness needed to compose, that motivated him. It's funny but during our marriage I was pleased that there was one song of sadness. We had a very special world. "


1969 marks their lives experience in the Sound Experimentation Group ICAIC. What is your memory of that moment?

"I remember that Paul is integrated and began to study music, he was a songwriter who had never done a musical arrangement, there develops and grows. Before writing the text and melody, was getting up from the text notes. They were part of an enlightened generation, he knew Silvio since 1967, who presented is Omara Portuondo, and had the habit of doing that every time a song you showed it to the other. Converged there and learned many musical interests helping each other. "


It was a laboratory, Yolanda went there several nights, was part of everyday life.


She recalls that the first settlement that was just made as a group for a song that came to Paul and EGREM Studios to see how that sounded, because each had written something, a guitar, another drums. An exciting time that comes to mind when you go back to those recordings.


"After many directors were called for documentaries, newsreels and feature films. The first thing we did was a film by Rogelio Paris: The new school. Who (15 questions about a teacher) who also had music by Silvio, and it was wonderful. At first it was no propaganda about the group, was essentially a laboratory for the film, there were experiments and gave their classes, then started his concerts, new and experimental music but also very Cuban. They worked on various topics, such as Brazilian music, a concert was all in Portuguese and usually attended by many young people. "


Who do you remember that time?


"If I close my eyes I remember them all together: Paul, Silvio, Noel, Belinda Romeu, who was also in this, Omara, Sergio, it was a great concert and they participated in the Cuban side. It was that period in which some American singers joined: Daniel Viglietti, Mercedes Sosa, Isabel Parra ... Oh, and Pete Seeger. "


Paul was gradually more and more dear. Their presence was often a TV show: Take a song and appeared regularly with Silvio. Yolanda Paul wrote that many songs at the time they lived together. For example: I do not ask, she knew it was him, thought it was because he used to Silvio Love songs from Silvio. That was a delicious trap and humble.


One day I sang "I do not ask me to go down a blue star ..." and she said: 'How beautiful the song of Silvio, "and he said' No, me and you. It was the first of all the great songs he composed.


Yolanda is a bell, sharp, humble, revolutionized everything in its path, Paul melancholy, silent, with his glasses pasta squares. When she knows he sang very sad things, dragging some personal sadness to all his works, many trying to breaks, loves apart, suddenly, I was not asking a bounce in your joy. It was a different song to which he was accustomed to compose. "It was a change of its energy. His earlier work was homesickness, sparrow, I saw that song change for the better. "




Perhaps it is his laughter and optimism that keeps Yolanda candor which changes their work. "Paul always said he needed to be sad to create." At 25 he was installed in his sadness, creating, spilling it all on his guitar.


Yolanda The song is bright, is an ode to eternity. It is a tear and a hymn. "Yolanda?;  Yolanda is all magic. She appears to me, is a gentle spirit, and with me. You can not imagine what parts of the world arrives, the remote sites that I've been and I found that song. "


She travels far, you and me, really it looks like you and you to it. This is what I feel when I'm away and someone sings. They say that sometimes when she is alone in an airport or on a street in a strange city and listening, shakes, coy still long, is unable to say who is and what he has unleashed his name, his presence.


You can finish everything, you can call into question many things, but we have works that tell us that we were real, there was a utopia and love. Yolanda is a key. How did?



"He was crazy for having a son born Lynn, the first of our three daughters. When she was about a week old, Paul travels to work ICAIC. It was terrible to get rid of the house goes into the back country and when we were in the house of my mother. The girl was majadera, cried, did not want to sleep, I tried, but it was a struggle. Noel Nicola arrived, Paul took the guitar and I sang Do not ask me, I want to put my feet on the ground and Yolanda.


At that moment she listened attentively, was treating the girl, did not notice his face in frustration, was focused on the baby. Calmly, and at night, very late when everyone was asleep and they were alone, while she was nursing the child she asks Paul to sing her new songs, and first listening: Yolanda.


How you got, what went through your head at that moment?


"For a woman had just given birth, breastfeeding, the fact that Paul appears with a song like that paralyzed me. But mostly because he knew how to combine many things we had in common, codes, symbols, and everything passed it through a seemingly simple song. "


Unravel a little semiotic love this game:"Reciting the creed that you taught me.""That was and is something of ours, this was forever."They worked in the ICAIC, but with different schedules. They lived in the same neighborhood, in El Vedado, in a flat 15. There was a window, a secret space, and once exposed, the distance that the sum communicated with clarity.


"Here the light is wonderful and we communicate, we could" talk "in the distance, through the movements we did a side to side of the street and we formed words of love.We counted the hours. He and I had an almost exact daily life and when I came home and he was watching me, following me in a way, a very special ritual, then began to signal with the window. That no one understands him, but when I hear it never ceases to amaze me how the synthetic capacity to say that he found everything in the same verse. "


Let the fantasy all the popular imagination has on the intrinsic codes that brings the body of this memorable text, to unveil it.



"I could remember more, trust you more and more things but I've always fled to this, honestly I think the merit of all, you may have regarding these songs, it's just him. Paul is the artist, the poet. I am Yolanda.


"Something interesting is that neither he nor I mentioned the possibility of ever recorded, was a close, a secret of both. The song began to emerge in the ICAIC, musicians, managers, and also made him a wonderful arrangement, was recorded ICAIC immediately in their own, which premiered a documentary Pastor Vega and Paul began to sing at concerts. In the early years did not have that impact it has today. Now is an anthem. He always tells me he has tried to remove it from the repertoire has new stuff, songs that may well be in place, but never could, because people will not let him. "


Yolanda understood as part of their everyday world, Yolanda & Yolanda  harmony in a world both personal and universal, it belongs to the aesthetic taste she loved and always admired Paul, before and after meeting him, before and after being together, she I dreamed of this type of work you loot the soul and at the same time you return to life with optimism.


The funny thing is that this song was slow to make between 20 minutes to an hour, it seems very simple, but in art the simple things take an unexpected dimension.


"It was all odds, do not think he ever thought that this work was to transcend both, to remain in force despite the years that have, despite what we have experienced two later, because if we did our later lives and have been happy each in its history. I think it was done with his immense talent and with so much truth and such a feeling, with so much love in the time, I think that is what makes that transcends every day. "


Instead: The time he spent relentless was the end.


"We were already separated. Undeniably, this is a song that brings a tear terrible, wrote in a crisis. But that is an artist, a creator, the human ingenuity that takes your pain with making jewelry. "


What I most admired as a composer Yolanda Paul is his "gift prolific." As a human being she confesses "Paul is the father I always wanted for my daughters and even if it were beyond me, since I first saw in their approach to children, their tenderness, I liked I do not think I was wrong. "
They have three beautiful daughters: Lynn, Liam and Suylen. "We have 7 grandchildren together. The three girls studied music, Lynn is also a professional singer and flutist. A decorator cream transforms the spaces well, in that looks a lot like me. "


Suylen sings when life inspires it, now is the PM Records recording studios his latest album, but it is so intense that it can take a music company and produce a festival the likes of "Propositions".


Liam: graduate choral conducting has chosen for his shyness, business life in the world of music, but occasionally sings because it has a very nice voice. And the grandchildren always together, because they founded a family together, having also the other children of Paul.
Paul and Yolanda have found a beautiful balance, to be together whenever they can to enjoy the family they have created, in good times and bad. To my question how he could rebuild his life beyond the myth, she replied: "As ever I am."




Enjoy the song "Yolanda" by Pablo Milanes authoring ...





Vale la Pena 3





"Psicología"


con Manuel Calviño

(Continuación)





Profesor de Psicología de la Universidad de La Habana
Conductor del programa televisivo "Vale la Pena"
Licenciado en Psicología
Doctor en Ciencias Psicológicas
Máster en Marketing y Gestión Empresarial
Máster en Marketing y Comunicación



Aprobado e Instrumentado




Dueño de la verdad





Qué Tengo Pa´Tí
2012


Guantanamera




"El Humor Negro En El Cine"



Me resultó tentadora la idea y decidí cerrar  Facebook, My Space, Google, Orkut y Univisión por unas horas, para recrearme frente a la pantalla de mi PC con ésta propuesta del binomio Juan Carlos Tabío y Tomás Gutierrez Alea; los mismos que se inspiraron en "Fresa y Chocolate". Cuántos recuerdos vienen a mi mente: las colas en el "Payret" a mi salida del pre universitario, la Ruta 82 que se demoraba tanto como la 18 o la 61 cuando salíamos del Estadio del Cerro, la 132 de Playa o la 98 de La Lisa ... en fín, odiseas tras odiseas. Sin embargo, cuando hago la retrospectiva en el tiempo me doy cuenta que lo que transcurre en ésta película pudo haberle pasado a cualquier familia cubana y que muchas veces pudo haberle "timbrado" el hígado a cualquiera si lo tomaba muy a pecho.

Desde la legendaria "Muerte de un burócrata", el humor negro se hizo presente en ambos directores. Esa magia y esa astucia para "atrapar" al espectador, siempre estuvo presente en todas y cada una de sus realizaciones. Tal vez hoy en día muchos de ustedes no la aprecien como la acabo de ver en el 2012; pero es que esa palabra de nuestro Gran Diccionario Castellano llamada 'burocratismo", me duele tanto y persiste tanto, que decidí de una vez y por todas de seguirla criticando y combatiendo hasta las últimas consecuencias.




Trailer 1



Como toda crítica a la realidad cubana de aquel entonces y que muchos sufrimos en carne propia, el periódico "El Nuevo Herald" se hizo eco del filme a través de nuestro colega Juan O. Tamayo. El 29 de marzo de 1998, redactaba el siguiente artículo el cual transcribimos en su totalidad:

"Fue sólo una crítica a una película cubana que se burlaba de los disparates socialistas. Pero el crítico era Fidel Castro y sus palabras provocaron alarma y desafío entre los intelectuales habaneros."Comandante, no estamos acostumbrados a discrepar de usted'', dicen que dijo un escritor en una borrascosa reunión con los intelectuales a principios de este mes. Durante la misma, cada parte trató de explicar su propio punto de vista y tranquilizar a la otra.

Algunos escritores y artistas dicen que la reunión calmó sus temores y que su mismo impacto demostró que la libertad artística está viva. Pero el incidente dejó un sabor de un recrudecimiento de la represión entre muchos intelectuales que dicen que las palabras de Castro ya habían levantado una ola de miedo y dudas en el mundo de la cultura.Castro desató la discusión en un discurso de siete horas el 24 de febrero en el que fustigó a una película "desbalanceada'' que se "burlaba mórbidamente'' de la revolución. Alegó no recordar su título pero estaba claro que se trataba de Guantanamera, una comedia de 1995 sobre las absurdos burocráticos con que tropieza una mujer que tiene que organizar el funeral de un pariente. El filme circuló mucho fuera de Cuba y resultó muy popular con las audiencias de Nueva York y Miami.

A los pocos días del discurso de Castro, la película fue sacada de la programación para el 39 aniversario del Instituto Cubano del Arte y la Industria Cinematográficos (ICAIC). El presidente del instituto, Alfredo Guevara, un viejo defensor del derecho de los artistas a tener una visión crítica aunque respetuosa del socialismo, fue veladamente criticado por los comunistas ortodoxos.Guevara dijo poco después a los periodistas en La Habana, "tengo el alma desgarrada pero permanezco más fiel que nunca a mis convicciones revolucionarias, y opto por el silencio''. Sus palabras recibieron mucha publicidad en el exterior, aunque no en Cuba.

A los escritores y artistas cubanos les preocupa que Castro esté indicando un regreso a los años 70, cuando el gobierno trató de imponerles a los intelectuales una especie de Realismo Socialista al estilo soviético.

Según una revista mexicana, Juan Carlos Tabío, un director de cine y miembro del ICAIC, dijo: "No sabemos si esto traerá un ajuste a la política del ICAIC o si éstos son solamente los criterios personales del presidente Castro''.También preocupa a muchos que el gobierno tal vez les apriete las riendas a los muchos artistas y escritores que se han trasladado al extranjero para ganar dólares, pero que mantienen discreto el nivel de crítica al gobierno para que se les permita seguir visitando la isla.

En medio de informes falsos sobre despidos en el instituto fílmico, Castro habló a puertas cerradas el 2 de marzo con unos 200 intelectuales, miembros de la controlada Unión Nacional de Escritores y Artistas Cubanos (UNEAC).Ocho miembros de la Unión defendieron a Guevara y a Guantanamera, y además el derecho de todo artista revolucionario a reflejar su sociedad y a criticarla, según dijo después un miembro que estaba presente.

A la queja de Castro de que la elite artística estaba yendo a demasiadas comidas en las embajadas extranjeras, un escritor replicó: "Sí, vamos, comemos y escuchamos, pero no hay problemas porque nuestra digestión es revolucionaria'', según contó un escritor sudamericano que tiene buenos contactos entre los intelectuales cubanos.

Fue una sesión agitada en la que Guevara se sintió mal por momentos, y Abel Prieto, el ministro de cultura y ex director de la unión de escritores, discutió acaloradamente con Esteban Lazo, un miembro del Buró Político del Partido Comunista.

"No usamos la palabra confrontación, pero cada bando explicó su posición con igual franqueza'', dijo otro miembro presente de la unión de escritores.

Cuando los intelectuales acabaron de desahogarse, Castro preguntó si alguno de los miembros presentes difería de opinión con los que hablaron. Nadie lo hizo, y él empezó a defender sus críticas de Guantanamera.

Según se dice, Castro dijo que no había visto la película, pero no iba a retractarse tampoco. Y dijo que, aunque había "otros sectores'' del partido y del gobierno que no estaban de acuerdo con la UNEAC, "si ustedes nos persuaden, tal vez podamos cambiar de opinión''.

Los miembros salieron de la sesión con la impresión de que Castro había "dejado una puerta abierta al diálogo'', según dijo el escritor sudamericano. Según ellos, la prueba fue que el discurso de Castro el 24 de febrero, a diferencia de la mayoría de sus discursos, no se ha publicado nunca en los medios de noticias de Cuba.

Aparentemente, Guevara trató de obviar el asunto al decirle a alguien que lo entrevistó por televisión el 16 de marzo que los comentarios de Castro sobre Guantanamera fueron "útiles, porque al menos está pensando en nosotros, y eso es bueno''.

Los intelectuales, dijo, continúan "leales a la revolución, críticos como él [Castro] pero no más que él''. Agregó que tratarán de persuadir a Castro, pero "aún tienen la capacidad para aflojar, no abandonar, nuestro lenguaje'' de crítica.

"Todo lo que es superfluo se deshace, todo lo firme y auténtico sobrevive'', declaró Guevara poco después de la reunión del sindicato de escritores, en lo que se tomó como una señal de que los intelectuales habían sobrevivido el ataque de Castro.Pero otros intelectuales no estaban tranquilos.

Escritores y artistas más jóvenes que aún no han logrado entrar en el gremio de escritores ahora se sienten más vulnerables a las posibles presiones del gobierno y los funcionarios de cultura del partido."Guevara y esa gente tienen largos historiales de trabajo en la revolución que les da el poder para hacer muchas cosas'', dijo un joven pintor. "Pero para nosotros, cualquier crítica puede traer sanciones''.

Un miembro del sindicato de escritores recordó una reacción similar en marzo de 1996 por el jefe del ejército Raúl Castro, hermano de Fidel, contra un grupo de economistas que estaban a favor de reformas de mercado más abiertas.

Después que el ataque produjo temores de medidas más severas, Raúl Castro afirmó que no habría "una caza de brujas''. Pero media docena de los economistas fueron transferidos a puestos menos importantes y cayeron en un silencio oficial. El arranque de Raúl Castro ahora se ve como el fin de significantes reformas económicas en Cuba.

"El gobierno da seguridad de que nada terrible sucede'', dijo un periodista de La Habana. "Pero las palabras de amenaza flotan en la atmósfera y la gente sabe que es hora de actuar de forma diferente''.

Copyright © 1998 El Nuevo Herald




Sinópsis

Yoyita, regresa a sus 67 años a Guantánamo para visitar a su sobrina Gina y encontrarse con Cándido, un antiguo amor de juventud. La repentina muerte de Yoyita provoca el viaje de Cándido, Gina y su marido Adolfo, funcionario del estado, para transportar el cuerpo de Yoyita siguiendo un nuevo plan estatal diseñado para ahorrar dinero en el traslado de los fallecidos. Durante ese viaje, multitud de situaciones cómicas y adversidades complican el éxito de la empresa. Los integrantes de la expedición se encuentran con Mariano y Ramón, dos amigos camioneros con quienes compartirán casi cada parada. Mariano es un antiguo estudiante de Gina que estaba enamorado de ella. El inesperado reencuentro de ambos promete, sin duda, emociones y aventuras. Estos viajes proveen una crítica de los problemas de Cuba.




Ficha Técnica







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Qué Tengo Pa' Tí
2012


Afrocuban All Stars live in Japan ! (English Version)





"The Cuban Son at it´s best"



You can't experience the Afro Cuban All Stars "Live in Japan" and not pause to wonder at the enormous force and artistic talent of Juan de Marcos González, its music director. He's an artist at the heart of Cuban musical expression and at the pinnacle of his vocation as a musician, writer, director and producer. He is no less than a cultural ambassador and icon of present day Cuba. Casting aside political ideology, he has undeniably helped to cultivate a re-emergence of Cuban culture that deserves nothing less than a Nobel Peace prize. Ok, so he might have to share it; so what. 

The world's appetite for all things "Cuban" is rooted first and foremost in its musical heritage even as its legendary tobacco looms near. Unmistakably, De Marcos delivers this rich heritage to the world by meticulously assembling many of Cuba's musical legends and today's prominent musicians in spite of history, politics or ideological indoctrination. He remains a steadfast envoy of authentic Cuban music forms, the wave on which all music structured around its patented rhythms rides. 




Perhaps turning to his tenure as a former instructor or as a member of Sierra Maestra, De Marcos demonstrates a penchant for injecting instructive doses of Cuban musical diversity and vitality. Part of his special touch lies in developing and showcasing young talent matched with the impeccable credentials of Cuba's music legends. He also offers his dancing and listening audiences Cuban classics mixed with newly pressed compositions. On this CD alone, De Marcos penned four original songs including the reprised and diplomatically appealing timba-son "Reconciliación," an appeal to Cubans to put aside their political differences and animosity for the good of Cuba. In "Distinto, Diferente" De Marcos reproves the many "imitators" of Cuban son for losing its sublime essence and vitality by rushing too quickly to the mambo and "coro or "estribillo" (refrain) sections of the arrangements. So many artists of the "salsa romántica" era became unwitting collaborators of the "rush" De Marcos decries and are now subsequently forgotten as if they never existed. There was little to distinguish one track or artist from another. Too much music of that era lacked originality, vitality and heart. It became dull and lost its sincerity, the essence of Cuban music. What salsa music lost in the 1980s, the Buena Vista Social Club abundantly made up in the 1990s with a return to sincerity and vitality, here Juan de Marcos and his fellow musicians left an indelible mark. 




The significance of De Marcos' music direction is that he deliberately clears away the plaque and artifice that unwittingly characterized commercial salsa and which greatly contributed to the listener's confusion and numbing of taste and sensibility. He wisely lets the music unfold and marinate its distinct and complex rhythms so that his dancer's eager feet and hips are energized and their souls take flight. 




It merits pointing out how seamlessly the 18-member jazz band, collectively known as the Afro Cuban All Stars, moves between Cuban music forms and periods. The CD's opening track "Tanga" demonstrates the group's mastery of Afro-Cuban jazz and offers an opportunity to listen to the promising genius of David Alfaro on piano. The multiple musical transitions in "Habana Del Este" are executed with agility and genuine excitement. A fan of son montuno, two favorites of mine are "Los Sitio Asere" and "Canallón", songs that can be traced directly to the bands of Arsenio Rodríguez and Félix Chappotín. If you wish to be swept away by the entrancing keyboard sounds of lead pianist David Alfaro followed by a sublime and hypnotic 3/2 clave, turn to "Amor Verdadero." There is a fair sampling of the Cuban musical past and present. There is enough history and energy contained in this CD to satisfy the calm listener and the eager dancer. I am especially impressed by the energetic and dynamic discourse of Luis Frank Arias' vocals. In short, this CD addition is a great chapter in what is unquestionably one of the most prolific periods of Cuban music. I urge those considering this CD to immediately add it to their collection and be especially thrilled with the bonus DVD of their live performance in Japan, as show below. 




1.- Tangá
2.- Distinto, diferente
3.- Amor verdadero
4.- Habana del Este
5.- Cada vez que te veo
6.- Los Sitios, asere
7.- Reconciliación
8.- Canallón
9.- El Son de Baloy
10.- Los tamalitos de Olga
11.- María Caracoles
12.- Chán - Chán




Musicians include

* Ricardo "Tico" Martínez - Bongoes
* Rolando "El niño mentiras" Salgado - Congas
* Amadito Valdés - Timbales
* Ricardo Muñóz - Baby Bass
* David Alfaro - Piano
* Daniel "El Gordo" Ramos - Trumpet
* Yanko Pisaco - Trumpet
* Yaure Muñíz - Trumpet
* Alberto "Molote" Martínez - Trombone
*Antonio Leal - Trombone
* Raúl Gutiérrez - Baritone & tenor sax
* Polo Tamayo - Flute
* Teresita García Caturla - Lead singer, cuban percussion
and chorus
* Luis Frank "El Macri" Arias - Lead singer, cuban percussion
and chorus
* Félix Baloy - Lead singer, cuban percussion
and chorus
* Manuel "Puntillita" Licea - Lead singer, cuban percussion
and chorus
* Gliceria Abreu - Stage Manager and cuban percussion
* Juan de Marcos González - Band Leader, Tres
and cuban percussion





Juan de Marcos González is one of the most important figures in Cuban music today. He has a mission to show the world the wealth, diversity and vitality of Cuban music. His work with the Afrocuban All Stars, The Buena Vista Social Club, Rubén González, Ibrahím Ferrer, Sierra Maestra and others has made an extraordinary contribution to raising the profile of Cuban music throughout the world. However, neither his name nor his crucial contribution is well known to the general public and he remains something of an unsung hero on Cuban music.


Afrocuban All Stars live in Japan Online





Qué Tengo Pa´Tí
2012