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Silvio Rodríguez

Silvio Rodríguez Domínguez (born 29 November 1946) is a Cuban musician, and leader of the Nueva Trova movement.

Silvio Rodríguez
Silvio in Argentina in 2004
Background information
Birth nameSilvio Rodríguez Domínguez
Born (1946-11-29) 29 November 1946 (age 76)
OriginSan Antonio de los Baños, Havana Province, Cuba
GenresNueva Trova
Occupation(s)Singer-songwriter
Instrument(s)Guitar, vocals
Years active1967–present
Websitewww.zurrondelaprendiz.cult.cu

He is widely considered as Cuba's best folk singer and arguably one of Latin America's greatest singer-songwriters.[1] Known for his intellectual, highly eloquent and symbolic lyrics, his songs are iconic elements of Latin American left-leaning popular culture. Many of his songs have become classics in Latin American music, such as "Ojalá", "Playa Girón", "Unicornio", "Sueño con Serpientes", "Vamos a andar," and "La maza". Among his other well-known songs are political anthems like "Fusil contra fusil" and "Canción del Elegido", and poetic melodies like "A donde van" and "Noche sin fin y mar". He has released over 20 albums.

Rodríguez, musically and politically, is a symbol of the Latin American left. His lyrics are notably introspective, while his songs combine romanticism, eroticism, existentialism, revolutionary politics and idealism. As a humanist, his songs often bespeak a secular worldview, where humanity must make the best of this world.

Biography edit

Childhood edit

Rodríguez was born on 29 November 1946 in San Antonio de los Baños, a fertile valley in Havana Province known for its tobacco crop. He was raised in a family of poor farmers. His father, Víctor Dagoberto Rodríguez Ortega, was a farmer and amateur poet who supported socialist causes. His mother, Argelia Domínguez León, was a housewife. During her adolescence, she was a part of a singing duo with sister Orquídea Domínguez, with whom she participated in many radio broadcasts and cultural events. The first of his mother's songs that Rodríguez recalls hearing is "El colibrí," a Cuban folk song that he would later sing during many of his tours. On many occasions, Rodríguez has spoken how his love of music was developed by his mother, who would pass time singing boleros and songs from Santiago. Later, she also collaborated with him on a few musical works. One of his uncles, Ramiro Domínguez, was a professional musician and a member of the group Jazz Band Mambí.[2] This musical environment, which began with grandmother María León and her husband Felíx Domínguez, lovers of the trova musical style, inspired Rodríguez to take an interest in music during his childhood.[3]

Rodríguez was just two years old when he began singing for his father's friends. A few years later, he participated in the music competition Buscando una estrella ("Looking for a Star"), hosted by the now-defunct Cuban radio station CMQ. He was invited a few days later to participate in a musical competition for children held by the same station, this time directed by the well-known announcer Germán Pinelli. This time, he won first place for singing the bolero Viajera ("Traveler").[3]

When he was five years old, Silvio and his family moved to Havana due to a better job opportunity for his father in the tapestry business. In the capital, he participated in a radio event with the theme "We are Happy Today." He received his first instrument, a conga drum, from his uncle Ramiro. He would use it to imitate the rhythms of Benny Moré and the Orquesta Aragón.[4]

In 1953, at the age of seven years old and the beginning of the Cuban Revolution, his father enrolled him in the La Milagrosa Conservatory.[5] There, he passed the introductory class and the first piano course, given by Margarita Pérez Picó, within six months. However, in spite of Pérez's enthusiasm, Silvio lost interest and dropped out of the course after a short time. At nine years old and motivated by his father, who read him poems by José Martí and Rubén Darío,[6] among others, he took an interest in literature, paying attention to the work of both poets, as well as the genre of science fiction. Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's The Little Prince remained one of his favorite books in adulthood.[4]

At the age of ten years old, Rodríguez's parents divorced, and he temporarily returned to his hometown with his mother and sister. The two years that followed this event would be immortalized later in various songs published between 1969 and 1984, such as "El Paplote" or "Me veo claramente". However, his parents reconciled in 1958 and decided to move back to the capital, specifically to 530 San Miguel Street, in the city center.[7]

Adolescence edit

 
Silvio Rodríguez in 1962.

On January 1, 1959, when Rodríguez was thirteen years old, Fidel Castro's Éjercito Rebelde brought an end to the dictatorship of Fulgencio Batista. This event shaped the musical life of the singer-songwriter and coincided with his transition from childhood into adolescence. Like many Cubans of his generations, he became involved with the new revolutionary enthusiasm. Despite regularly traveling between his hometown and the capital, he enlisted in the San Antonio de los Baños chapter of the Association of Socialist Youth, created by Che Guevara. In parallel to his participation in this organization, Rodríguez enrolled in night school at the Carlos J. Finnay school to study for the bachillerato, a post-secondary degree. There, he became friends with Vicente Feliú, another future member of the Nueva Trova movement.[7]

The following year, amid social tension due to Cuba's nationalization of businesses and the United States' embargo, his parents separated once again, this time indefinitely. Argelia, who at this time worked at home as a hairdresser, married a man named Rolando and moved to 456 Gervasio Street, near Dagoberto. Silvio took an interest in classical music during this time.[7]

In January 1961, the United States broke diplomatic relations with Cuba following the election of president John F. Kennedy, who authorized the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) to invade the country. On April 15, bombings began in Havana, Santiago de Cuba, and San Antonio de los Baños, to which the family had recently returned despite the protests of Silvio, who had recently joined his school's militia. The return to his hometown was an opportunity for Silvio to assume new responsibilities, passing from adolescence to young adulthood.[8]

Young Adulthood edit

One of the first social goals of the Cuban Revolution was to drastically reduce the rate of illiteracy in the country. In one year, it was able to reduce the rate from 23.6% to 3.9%. Though still a minor, he participated as a member of the Conrado Benítez Literacy Brigades in the Escambray Mountains. There, he helped give the campesinos classes in history, geography, grammar, and mathematics, as well as explaining elements of the new government, such as the Agrarian Reform plan. In 1961, during one of the campaigns, Rodríguez ingested a toxic plant, suffering second-degree burns that forced him to return to Havana.[9]

Once again in the capital, he met the caricaturists Virgilio Martínez and José Luis Posada, who worked for Mella, a communist magazine. He began to collaborate with the magazine in early 1962. He met the writers Víctor Casaus and Luis Rogelio Nogueras, who would later write a book, Silvio: que levante la mano la guitarra[10], later adapted into a film of the same name. Rodríguez began to read the works of Federico García Lorca, Pablo Neruda, Guillén, Edgar Allan Poe, and Walt Whitman. In the magazine, Rodríguez became well known for his work as illustrator for the series El hueco. One of his colleagues, Lázaro Fundora, played the guitar as a hobby and taught Rodríguez the first chords of the instrument that would become a key part of his future work.[8]

In 1963, with the birth of his second sister, Anabell López, the daughter of his mother and Rolando, Rodríguez began his studies in painting at the School of San Alejandro, in Havana. He also returned to the piano classes he had abandoned in his childhood, this time under the guidance of Elvira Fabre Obregón.[11]

At 17 years old in 1964, he was required to participate in compulsory military service. He joined the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias (FAR), where he would meet Esteban Baños, a member of his unit who gave him further instruction in playing the guitar. It was in the Managua military encampment that Rodríguez composed his first songs, which he played for the other soldiers. His first songs, written in 1964 and 1965, were the boleros ¨Saudade" and "La cascada," both about love; later, he wrote "Atavismo", "Nuestra ciudad", "Es sed", "Te vas", and "La otra presencia". His interest in protest songs came shortly after this period. At the same time, he worked as an illustrator for the Art and Science section of the magazine Venceremos, which was published by the political section of the Army. In 1965, he transferred to the magazine Verde Olive, where he remained until the end of his military service, working during the day and teaching himself the guitar at night.[11]

In 1967, just before completing his military service, Rodríguez won an honorary mention in the literary competition of the FAR for his book of poems Honradado Cuaderno No. 1.[12] At the end of this period, Rodríguez began his prolific music career.[11]

Music career edit

Television career edit

Rodríguez made his musical debut in front of the general public on June 13, 1967 in the television program Música y estrellas,[11] invited to perform by musical director Mario Romeu. On that occasion, Rodríguez performed "Es sed", "Sueño del colgado y la tierra", and "Quédate", the latter of which appeared later on his album Expedición, released in 2002.[13]

Between November 1967 and mid-1968, he was the host of the television program Mientras tanto, named after one of his songs. The program had artists, writers, cinematographers, and new and established artists as guest stars. Among those featured were Bola de Nieve, Omara Portuondo, and Elena Burke, among other influential Cuban artists. Each episode ended with Rodríguez's song "Y nada más", which appeared in his 1978 album Mujeres. After the death of Che Guevara in 1967, he wrote the protest songs "¿Por qué?", and "La leyenda del águila". Other songs written during this period include 'Ay de mí', 'Debajo del cañón', 'Déjame regresar', 'En busca del tiempo perdido', 'En ti', 'Graciela', 'Grita más', 'Hay un grupo que dice', 'Los funerales del insecto', 'María', 'Muerto', 'Oye', 'Quién va a pensar en algo más', 'Si se va la esperanza', 'Tema de la adolescencia', 'Tengo que estar en ti', 'Treinta años', 'Tu beso', and 'Y anoche'. Some of these were dedicated to a woman named Emilia, who he viewed as his first important love.[13][11]

Rodríguez affirms that he has always felt a sense of panic in front of the lights and cameras. However, despite his notoriety for being a nervous television host, his program received a positive reception from the Cuban public.[14]

Nueva Trova edit

It wasn't until 1967, with his first television experience, that he started to become well-known and influential among Cuban, revolutionary youth. With pro-revolution, yet very independent, lyrics (together with his very informal dress code), Rodríguez soon attracted the animosity of some members of the new Culture Ministry, which was devoted to the eradication of the United States' influence in Cuban culture.[citation needed] In this context, a very important role was played by the cultural institution Casa de las Américas and its then director Haydée Santamaría, the former a respected revolutionary who participated in the Moncada barracks assault of 1953 and sister of Abel Santamaría, who was tortured and killed after the failure of the assault. Haydée Santamaría became a protective mother-figure of the young composers and of several of his colleagues at the time. Casa de las Américas became the home not only for the new Cuban trovadores but also for many other Latin Americans on the left. It was in this institution that Rodríguez met Pablo Milanés, and Noel Nicola, who along with Rodríguez would become the most famous Nueva Trova singers and composers.

In 1969, for almost five months, he worked as part of the crew on the fishing boat Playa Girón, and during this fertile episode he wrote 62 songs, among which are the famous "Ojalá" and "Playa Girón." The lyrics and music of these songs became a book named Canciones del Mar. In 1976, he decided to join Cuban troops in Angola, playing for the soldiers.

After more than 40 years of artistic work, Rodríguez has now written a vast number of songs and poems (said to be between 500 and more than one thousand), many of which have never been set to music and probably never will be. Although his musical knowledge has been continuously increasing (counting among his teachers the famous Cuban composer Leo Brouwer), he is more widely praised for the poetry in his songs than for the accompanying music. His lyrics are a staple of leftist culture throughout the whole Spanish-speaking world, and he has been banned from the media during several of the dictatorial regimes that ruled Latin America in the late 1970s and early 1980s.

His debut album was Días y flores, launched in 1975. Al final de este viaje and Cuando digo futuro feature songs he composed before Días y flores. He reached international popularity in the early 1980s with Rabo de nube and, in particular, Unicornio. In the early part of his career his work displayed a fair amount of revolutionary optimism. Mujeres, released in 1979, is in contrast a romantic and highly intimist album. In the middle of his career, Silvio Rodríguez experimented with sounds and rhythms departing from his trademark acoustic guitar, accompanied by the group Afrocuba (e.g. in Causas y azares). At maturity, Silvio Rodríguez thoroughly purified his sound through a return to acoustic guitar, great care and sophistication in the voice, and exclusive control of the production process from beginning to end. His lyrics became more introspective, at times even self-absorbed or self-justifying, expressing melancholic longings about the shortcomings of real-life socialism in Cuba while vindicating idealism and revolutionary hope amongst the youth. The trilogy, called Silvio, Rodríguez, and Domínguez (his first name, his father's last name, his mother's last name) displays sound artistic talent. The doubts, absent in the early part of his career, also correspond to the fall of Soviet communism and the so-called Special Period in Cuba.[citation needed] An unnoticed recurrent theme in the lyrics of the early part of his career is that of death, particularly although not only as associated with guerrilla warfare. In contrast to the explicitness of his early songs and political positions, there was a displacement of emphasis in his later years toward fantasy and dreams. Both, however, are about an alternative that is not present but is called for, or what Laclau would call a longing for a "missing fullness". This is true politically, romantically, and existentially. In a similar way, the unusual confessional tone of many of his songs allows for an unorthodox combination of transgression, eroticism, longing, and at times (probably accurate) self-deprecation in many of his lyrics.

The entire work of Silvio Rodríguez offers an intimate and introspective window into the life cycle of the artist. If the lyrics of the early part of his career are about revolutionary enthusiasm, love encounters and disappointments, as well as sensual desire, and if the middle-aged Silvio is more self-questioning, often looking backward; his most recent albums, such as Cita con ángeles, talk in part about his life as a grandfather and has a certain focus on children, while Érase que se era is the release (with all the means that come with being an established artist) of songs written early in his youth but never previously recorded. Mariposas also featured two classics composed in his youth.

Silvio Rodríguez stands out in the Spanish-speaking world for the intimacy and subtlety of his lyrics, as well as for his acoustic melodies and "chord picking." He is particularly popular amongst intellectual circles of the left in Latin America and Spain. He has also often served as Cuban cultural emissary in events of solidarity, whether in Chile (Silvio Rodríguez in Chile, 1990) or Argentina (En vivo en Argentina, recorded in 1984), both massive concerts given shortly after the fall of the right-wing dictatorships. Cuban flags are always conspicuous in the crowd during his concerts.[citation needed] Chilean audiences had become familiar with Silvio Rodríguez through the circulation of clandestine pirate cassettes in the 1980s.[15]

In 2007, he received a doctorate honoris causa from Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos in Peru.[16] (Lima, Peru).

Rodríguez has been a major influence on many folk artists, including the Swedish artist José González.[17]

U.S. appearance edit

Silvio Rodríguez has been denied a United States visa several times, and it was particularly controversial in 2009 when he was invited to celebrate the 90th birthday of Pete Seeger. However, in 2010, he obtained a visa and performed at venues in Puerto Rico (30 May), New York (4 and 10 June), Oakland, (12 June), Los Angeles (17 June), Washington, D.C. (19 June) and Orlando (23 June). These were his first appearances in the United States in 30 years.[18][19]

Discography edit

References edit

  1. ^ Adela Micha (29 November 2016). "Hoy cumple 70 años el cantautor más querido de Cuba, Silvio Rodríguez" (in Spanish). Imagen Radio. Retrieved 17 November 2017.
  2. ^ Marta Valdés: La Jiribilla (12-18 de marzo de 2005). «Conversando con Silvio Rodríguez». Consultado el 26 de octubre de 2012.
  3. ^ a b León Ojeda, Nestor José (2005). Silvio Rodríguez: Análisis literario y musical de sus obras más populares. Semblanza biográfica (1ª edición). España: Abecedario. pp. 27-28. ISBN 978-84-934089-5-4.
  4. ^ a b León, op. cit., p. 29.
  5. ^ Manabe, Noriko (diciembre de 2006). «Lovers and rulers, the real and the surreal: harmonic metaphors in Silvio Rodríguez's songs». Transcultural music review/Revista transcultural de música (10).
  6. ^ Serrano, Margarita. ««A mí no me gusta cantar... me gusta hacer canciones»: Entrevista a Silvio Rodríguez para diario La Tercera, Chile, 22 de septiembre de 1996». Zurrón del Aprendiz. Archivado desde el original el 19 de diciembre de 2013. Consultado el 16 de mayo de 2013.
  7. ^ a b c León, op. cit., pp. 32-33.
  8. ^ a b León, op. cit., p. 34.
  9. ^ León, op. cit., pp. 35-36.
  10. ^ Casaus, Víctor; Nogueras, Luis Rogelio (1984). Silvio: que levante la mano la guitarra. La Habana, Cuba: Letras Cubanas. ISBN 959-10-0740-X. Archivado desde el original el 14 de noviembre de 2011. Consultado el 4 de febrero de 2012.
  11. ^ a b c d e León, op. cit., pp. 37-39.
  12. ^ Radio RedDelSur (2009). «Silvio Rodríguez: Biografía». Archivado desde el original el 26 de marzo de 2014. Consultado el 2 de marzo de 2012.
  13. ^ a b Zurrón del aprendiz. «Canciones inéditas». Archivado desde el original el 22 de diciembre de 2011. Consultado el 15 de febrero de 2012.
  14. ^ Zurrón del aprendiz. «Al inicio de este viaje en la vida». Archivado desde el original el 11 de junio de 2012. Consultado el 20 de febrero de 2012.
  15. ^ Jordán, Laura. "Música y clandestinidad en dictadura: la represión, la circulación de músicas de resistencia y el casete clandestino" [Music and "clandestinidad" During the Time of the Chilean Dictatorship: Repression and the Circulation of Music of Resistance and Clandestine Cassettes]. Revista Musical Chilena (in Spanish). 63 (Julio–Diciembre): 212.
  16. ^ "Honoris Causa para trovador cubano Silvio Rodríguez", San Marcos al Día, 22 de febrero de 2006.
  17. ^ José González interview with Hate Something Beautiful, 29 June 2006
  18. ^ "Silvio Rodriguez Plays First American Show in 30 Years", May 14, 2010.
  19. ^ Music Review: A Cuban Folk Song Pioneer, New York Times, 6 June 2010.

External links edit

  • Official Silvio Rodriguez's website Songs, pictures, writings (in Spanish)
  • Official Silvio Rodriguez's blog – More than 5800 followers (in Spanish)
  • Official Silvio Rodriguez's Suenacubano Profile
  • Analysis of Silvio Rodriguez Songs Meaning of lyrics (in Spanish)
  • – Songs of Silvio Rodriguez dedicated to Che Guevara
  • Hasta Siempre Commandante on YouTube – performed live by Silvio Rodriguez
  • TRANS Analysis of the harmonies of Silvio's songs, socio-cultural background PDF
  • Brief reviews of Silvio's albums
  • Cuban Singer Complains that U.S. Didn’t Give Him Visa by the Latin American Herald Tribune
  • Cuba's Silvio Rodriguez Dedicates Song to 'Che' AP, 23 July 2009
  • Cuban Folk Singer Plays Rare US Show 5 June 2010
  • Silvio Rodriguez Concert in USA Photo Feature by Bill Hackwell, Havana Times, 17 June 2010

silvio, rodríguez, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, rodríguez, second, maternal, family, name, domínguez, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, spanish, july, 2021, click, show, important, translation,. In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Rodriguez and the second or maternal family name is Dominguez You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Spanish July 2021 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 5 128 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Spanish Wikipedia article at es Silvio Rodriguez see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated es Silvio Rodriguez to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Silvio Rodriguez Dominguez born 29 November 1946 is a Cuban musician and leader of the Nueva Trova movement Silvio RodriguezSilvio in Argentina in 2004Background informationBirth nameSilvio Rodriguez DominguezBorn 1946 11 29 29 November 1946 age 76 OriginSan Antonio de los Banos Havana Province CubaGenresNueva TrovaOccupation s Singer songwriterInstrument s Guitar vocalsYears active1967 presentWebsitewww wbr zurrondelaprendiz wbr cult wbr cu He is widely considered as Cuba s best folk singer and arguably one of Latin America s greatest singer songwriters 1 Known for his intellectual highly eloquent and symbolic lyrics his songs are iconic elements of Latin American left leaning popular culture Many of his songs have become classics in Latin American music such as Ojala Playa Giron Unicornio Sueno con Serpientes Vamos a andar and La maza Among his other well known songs are political anthems like Fusil contra fusil and Cancion del Elegido and poetic melodies like A donde van and Noche sin fin y mar He has released over 20 albums Rodriguez musically and politically is a symbol of the Latin American left His lyrics are notably introspective while his songs combine romanticism eroticism existentialism revolutionary politics and idealism As a humanist his songs often bespeak a secular worldview where humanity must make the best of this world Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Childhood 1 2 Adolescence 1 3 Young Adulthood 2 Music career 2 1 Television career 2 2 Nueva Trova 3 U S appearance 4 Discography 4 1 Studio albums 4 2 Collaborative albums 4 3 Live albums 4 4 EP 5 References 6 External linksBiography editChildhood edit Rodriguez was born on 29 November 1946 in San Antonio de los Banos a fertile valley in Havana Province known for its tobacco crop He was raised in a family of poor farmers His father Victor Dagoberto Rodriguez Ortega was a farmer and amateur poet who supported socialist causes His mother Argelia Dominguez Leon was a housewife During her adolescence she was a part of a singing duo with sister Orquidea Dominguez with whom she participated in many radio broadcasts and cultural events The first of his mother s songs that Rodriguez recalls hearing is El colibri a Cuban folk song that he would later sing during many of his tours On many occasions Rodriguez has spoken how his love of music was developed by his mother who would pass time singing boleros and songs from Santiago Later she also collaborated with him on a few musical works One of his uncles Ramiro Dominguez was a professional musician and a member of the group Jazz Band Mambi 2 This musical environment which began with grandmother Maria Leon and her husband Felix Dominguez lovers of the trova musical style inspired Rodriguez to take an interest in music during his childhood 3 Rodriguez was just two years old when he began singing for his father s friends A few years later he participated in the music competition Buscando una estrella Looking for a Star hosted by the now defunct Cuban radio station CMQ He was invited a few days later to participate in a musical competition for children held by the same station this time directed by the well known announcer German Pinelli This time he won first place for singing the bolero Viajera Traveler 3 When he was five years old Silvio and his family moved to Havana due to a better job opportunity for his father in the tapestry business In the capital he participated in a radio event with the theme We are Happy Today He received his first instrument a conga drum from his uncle Ramiro He would use it to imitate the rhythms of Benny More and the Orquesta Aragon 4 In 1953 at the age of seven years old and the beginning of the Cuban Revolution his father enrolled him in the La Milagrosa Conservatory 5 There he passed the introductory class and the first piano course given by Margarita Perez Pico within six months However in spite of Perez s enthusiasm Silvio lost interest and dropped out of the course after a short time At nine years old and motivated by his father who read him poems by Jose Marti and Ruben Dario 6 among others he took an interest in literature paying attention to the work of both poets as well as the genre of science fiction Antoine de Saint Exupery s The Little Prince remained one of his favorite books in adulthood 4 At the age of ten years old Rodriguez s parents divorced and he temporarily returned to his hometown with his mother and sister The two years that followed this event would be immortalized later in various songs published between 1969 and 1984 such as El Paplote or Me veo claramente However his parents reconciled in 1958 and decided to move back to the capital specifically to 530 San Miguel Street in the city center 7 Adolescence edit nbsp Silvio Rodriguez in 1962 On January 1 1959 when Rodriguez was thirteen years old Fidel Castro s Ejercito Rebelde brought an end to the dictatorship of Fulgencio Batista This event shaped the musical life of the singer songwriter and coincided with his transition from childhood into adolescence Like many Cubans of his generations he became involved with the new revolutionary enthusiasm Despite regularly traveling between his hometown and the capital he enlisted in the San Antonio de los Banos chapter of the Association of Socialist Youth created by Che Guevara In parallel to his participation in this organization Rodriguez enrolled in night school at the Carlos J Finnay school to study for the bachillerato a post secondary degree There he became friends with Vicente Feliu another future member of the Nueva Trova movement 7 The following year amid social tension due to Cuba s nationalization of businesses and the United States embargo his parents separated once again this time indefinitely Argelia who at this time worked at home as a hairdresser married a man named Rolando and moved to 456 Gervasio Street near Dagoberto Silvio took an interest in classical music during this time 7 In January 1961 the United States broke diplomatic relations with Cuba following the election of president John F Kennedy who authorized the Central Intelligence Agency CIA to invade the country On April 15 bombings began in Havana Santiago de Cuba and San Antonio de los Banos to which the family had recently returned despite the protests of Silvio who had recently joined his school s militia The return to his hometown was an opportunity for Silvio to assume new responsibilities passing from adolescence to young adulthood 8 Young Adulthood edit One of the first social goals of the Cuban Revolution was to drastically reduce the rate of illiteracy in the country In one year it was able to reduce the rate from 23 6 to 3 9 Though still a minor he participated as a member of the Conrado Benitez Literacy Brigades in the Escambray Mountains There he helped give the campesinos classes in history geography grammar and mathematics as well as explaining elements of the new government such as the Agrarian Reform plan In 1961 during one of the campaigns Rodriguez ingested a toxic plant suffering second degree burns that forced him to return to Havana 9 Once again in the capital he met the caricaturists Virgilio Martinez and Jose Luis Posada who worked for Mella a communist magazine He began to collaborate with the magazine in early 1962 He met the writers Victor Casaus and Luis Rogelio Nogueras who would later write a book Silvio que levante la mano la guitarra 10 later adapted into a film of the same name Rodriguez began to read the works of Federico Garcia Lorca Pablo Neruda Guillen Edgar Allan Poe and Walt Whitman In the magazine Rodriguez became well known for his work as illustrator for the series El hueco One of his colleagues Lazaro Fundora played the guitar as a hobby and taught Rodriguez the first chords of the instrument that would become a key part of his future work 8 In 1963 with the birth of his second sister Anabell Lopez the daughter of his mother and Rolando Rodriguez began his studies in painting at the School of San Alejandro in Havana He also returned to the piano classes he had abandoned in his childhood this time under the guidance of Elvira Fabre Obregon 11 At 17 years old in 1964 he was required to participate in compulsory military service He joined the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias FAR where he would meet Esteban Banos a member of his unit who gave him further instruction in playing the guitar It was in the Managua military encampment that Rodriguez composed his first songs which he played for the other soldiers His first songs written in 1964 and 1965 were the boleros Saudade and La cascada both about love later he wrote Atavismo Nuestra ciudad Es sed Te vas and La otra presencia His interest in protest songs came shortly after this period At the same time he worked as an illustrator for the Art and Science section of the magazine Venceremos which was published by the political section of the Army In 1965 he transferred to the magazine Verde Olive where he remained until the end of his military service working during the day and teaching himself the guitar at night 11 In 1967 just before completing his military service Rodriguez won an honorary mention in the literary competition of the FAR for his book of poems Honradado Cuaderno No 1 12 At the end of this period Rodriguez began his prolific music career 11 Music career editTelevision career edit Rodriguez made his musical debut in front of the general public on June 13 1967 in the television program Musica y estrellas 11 invited to perform by musical director Mario Romeu On that occasion Rodriguez performed Es sed Sueno del colgado y la tierra and Quedate the latter of which appeared later on his album Expedicion released in 2002 13 Between November 1967 and mid 1968 he was the host of the television program Mientras tanto named after one of his songs The program had artists writers cinematographers and new and established artists as guest stars Among those featured were Bola de Nieve Omara Portuondo and Elena Burke among other influential Cuban artists Each episode ended with Rodriguez s song Y nada mas which appeared in his 1978 album Mujeres After the death of Che Guevara in 1967 he wrote the protest songs Por que and La leyenda del aguila Other songs written during this period include Ay de mi Debajo del canon Dejame regresar En busca del tiempo perdido En ti Graciela Grita mas Hay un grupo que dice Los funerales del insecto Maria Muerto Oye Quien va a pensar en algo mas Si se va la esperanza Tema de la adolescencia Tengo que estar en ti Treinta anos Tu beso and Y anoche Some of these were dedicated to a woman named Emilia who he viewed as his first important love 13 11 Rodriguez affirms that he has always felt a sense of panic in front of the lights and cameras However despite his notoriety for being a nervous television host his program received a positive reception from the Cuban public 14 Nueva Trova edit It wasn t until 1967 with his first television experience that he started to become well known and influential among Cuban revolutionary youth With pro revolution yet very independent lyrics together with his very informal dress code Rodriguez soon attracted the animosity of some members of the new Culture Ministry which was devoted to the eradication of the United States influence in Cuban culture citation needed In this context a very important role was played by the cultural institution Casa de las Americas and its then director Haydee Santamaria the former a respected revolutionary who participated in the Moncada barracks assault of 1953 and sister of Abel Santamaria who was tortured and killed after the failure of the assault Haydee Santamaria became a protective mother figure of the young composers and of several of his colleagues at the time Casa de las Americas became the home not only for the new Cuban trovadores but also for many other Latin Americans on the left It was in this institution that Rodriguez met Pablo Milanes and Noel Nicola who along with Rodriguez would become the most famous Nueva Trova singers and composers In 1969 for almost five months he worked as part of the crew on the fishing boat Playa Giron and during this fertile episode he wrote 62 songs among which are the famous Ojala and Playa Giron The lyrics and music of these songs became a book named Canciones del Mar In 1976 he decided to join Cuban troops in Angola playing for the soldiers After more than 40 years of artistic work Rodriguez has now written a vast number of songs and poems said to be between 500 and more than one thousand many of which have never been set to music and probably never will be Although his musical knowledge has been continuously increasing counting among his teachers the famous Cuban composer Leo Brouwer he is more widely praised for the poetry in his songs than for the accompanying music His lyrics are a staple of leftist culture throughout the whole Spanish speaking world and he has been banned from the media during several of the dictatorial regimes that ruled Latin America in the late 1970s and early 1980s His debut album was Dias y flores launched in 1975 Al final de este viaje and Cuando digo futuro feature songs he composed before Dias y flores He reached international popularity in the early 1980s with Rabo de nube and in particular Unicornio In the early part of his career his work displayed a fair amount of revolutionary optimism Mujeres released in 1979 is in contrast a romantic and highly intimist album In the middle of his career Silvio Rodriguez experimented with sounds and rhythms departing from his trademark acoustic guitar accompanied by the group Afrocuba e g in Causas y azares At maturity Silvio Rodriguez thoroughly purified his sound through a return to acoustic guitar great care and sophistication in the voice and exclusive control of the production process from beginning to end His lyrics became more introspective at times even self absorbed or self justifying expressing melancholic longings about the shortcomings of real life socialism in Cuba while vindicating idealism and revolutionary hope amongst the youth The trilogy called Silvio Rodriguez and Dominguez his first name his father s last name his mother s last name displays sound artistic talent The doubts absent in the early part of his career also correspond to the fall of Soviet communism and the so called Special Period in Cuba citation needed An unnoticed recurrent theme in the lyrics of the early part of his career is that of death particularly although not only as associated with guerrilla warfare In contrast to the explicitness of his early songs and political positions there was a displacement of emphasis in his later years toward fantasy and dreams Both however are about an alternative that is not present but is called for or what Laclau would call a longing for a missing fullness This is true politically romantically and existentially In a similar way the unusual confessional tone of many of his songs allows for an unorthodox combination of transgression eroticism longing and at times probably accurate self deprecation in many of his lyrics The entire work of Silvio Rodriguez offers an intimate and introspective window into the life cycle of the artist If the lyrics of the early part of his career are about revolutionary enthusiasm love encounters and disappointments as well as sensual desire and if the middle aged Silvio is more self questioning often looking backward his most recent albums such as Cita con angeles talk in part about his life as a grandfather and has a certain focus on children while Erase que se era is the release with all the means that come with being an established artist of songs written early in his youth but never previously recorded Mariposas also featured two classics composed in his youth Silvio Rodriguez stands out in the Spanish speaking world for the intimacy and subtlety of his lyrics as well as for his acoustic melodies and chord picking He is particularly popular amongst intellectual circles of the left in Latin America and Spain He has also often served as Cuban cultural emissary in events of solidarity whether in Chile Silvio Rodriguez in Chile 1990 or Argentina En vivo en Argentina recorded in 1984 both massive concerts given shortly after the fall of the right wing dictatorships Cuban flags are always conspicuous in the crowd during his concerts citation needed Chilean audiences had become familiar with Silvio Rodriguez through the circulation of clandestine pirate cassettes in the 1980s 15 In 2007 he received a doctorate honoris causa from Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos in Peru 16 Lima Peru Rodriguez has been a major influence on many folk artists including the Swedish artist Jose Gonzalez 17 U S appearance editSilvio Rodriguez has been denied a United States visa several times and it was particularly controversial in 2009 when he was invited to celebrate the 90th birthday of Pete Seeger However in 2010 he obtained a visa and performed at venues in Puerto Rico 30 May New York 4 and 10 June Oakland 12 June Los Angeles 17 June Washington D C 19 June and Orlando 23 June These were his first appearances in the United States in 30 years 18 19 Discography editStudio albums edit 1975 Dias y Flores 1978 Al Final de Este Viaje 1979 Mujeres 1979 Rabo de Nube 1982 Unicornio 1984 Triptico Volumes I II amp III 1992 Silvio 1994 Rodriguez 1996 Dominguez 1998 Descartes 1999 Mariposas 2002 Expedicion 2003 Cita con Angeles 2006 Erase Que Se Era 2010 Segunda Cita 2015 Amorios 2020 Para la espera Collaborative albums edit 1986 Causas y Azares with Afrocuba 1987 Arboles with Roy Brown 1988 Oh Melancolia with Afrocuba Live albums edit 1977 Cuando Digo Futuro 1984 En Vivo en Argentina with Pablo Milanes 1990 Silvio Rodriguez en Chile 1990 Espana y Argentina en vivo 1993 Mano a Mano with Luis Eduardo Aute EP edit 1968 Cancion Protesta 1969 Pluma en RistreReferences edit Adela Micha 29 November 2016 Hoy cumple 70 anos el cantautor mas querido de Cuba Silvio Rodriguez in Spanish Imagen Radio Retrieved 17 November 2017 Marta Valdes La Jiribilla 12 18 de marzo de 2005 Conversando con Silvio Rodriguez Consultado el 26 de octubre de 2012 a b Leon Ojeda Nestor Jose 2005 Silvio Rodriguez Analisis literario y musical de sus obras mas populares Semblanza biografica 1ª edicion Espana Abecedario pp 27 28 ISBN 978 84 934089 5 4 a b Leon op cit p 29 Manabe Noriko diciembre de 2006 Lovers and rulers the real and the surreal harmonic metaphors in Silvio Rodriguez s songs Transcultural music review Revista transcultural de musica 10 Serrano Margarita A mi no me gusta cantar me gusta hacer canciones Entrevista a Silvio Rodriguez para diario La Tercera Chile 22 de septiembre de 1996 Zurron del Aprendiz Archivado desde el original el 19 de diciembre de 2013 Consultado el 16 de mayo de 2013 a b c Leon op cit pp 32 33 a b Leon op cit p 34 Leon op cit pp 35 36 Casaus Victor Nogueras Luis Rogelio 1984 Silvio que levante la mano la guitarra La Habana Cuba Letras Cubanas ISBN 959 10 0740 X Archivado desde el original el 14 de noviembre de 2011 Consultado el 4 de febrero de 2012 a b c d e Leon op cit pp 37 39 Radio RedDelSur 2009 Silvio Rodriguez Biografia Archivado desde el original el 26 de marzo de 2014 Consultado el 2 de marzo de 2012 a b Zurron del aprendiz Canciones ineditas Archivado desde el original el 22 de diciembre de 2011 Consultado el 15 de febrero de 2012 Zurron del aprendiz Al inicio de este viaje en la vida Archivado desde el original el 11 de junio de 2012 Consultado el 20 de febrero de 2012 Jordan Laura Musica y clandestinidad en dictadura la represion la circulacion de musicas de resistencia y el casete clandestino Music and clandestinidad During the Time of the Chilean Dictatorship Repression and the Circulation of Music of Resistance and Clandestine Cassettes Revista Musical Chilena in Spanish 63 Julio Diciembre 212 Honoris Causa para trovador cubano Silvio Rodriguez San Marcos al Dia 22 de febrero de 2006 Jose Gonzalez interview with Hate Something Beautiful 29 June 2006 Silvio Rodriguez Plays First American Show in 30 Years May 14 2010 Music Review A Cuban Folk Song Pioneer New York Times 6 June 2010 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Silvio Rodriguez Official Silvio Rodriguez s website Songs pictures writings in Spanish Official Silvio Rodriguez s blog More than 5800 followers in Spanish Official Silvio Rodriguez s Suenacubano Profile Analysis of Silvio Rodriguez Songs Meaning of lyrics in Spanish Che Guia y Ejemplo Songs of Silvio Rodriguez dedicated to Che Guevara Hasta Siempre Commandante on YouTube performed live by Silvio Rodriguez TRANS Analysis of the harmonies of Silvio s songs socio cultural background PDF Brief reviews of Silvio s albums Silvio s page in Patria Grande Cuban Singer Complains that U S Didn t Give Him Visa by the Latin American Herald Tribune Cuba s Silvio Rodriguez Dedicates Song to Che AP 23 July 2009 Cuban Folk Singer Plays Rare US Show 5 June 2010 Silvio Rodriguez Concert in USA Photo Feature by Bill Hackwell Havana Times 17 June 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Silvio Rodriguez amp oldid 1172366476, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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