Welcome to World Music Central 05/21/2008 07:29PM  
  Home  |  Submissions  |  World Music Forum |  Links |  Calendar |  F.A.Q.  |  Directory of Articles  |  Contact Us  |
User Functions
:

:

Don't have an account yet? Sign up as a New User
Lost your password?

World Music News
CD Reviews
Articles
World Music sound loops and samples
General News
Interviews
Video Reviews
Book Reviews
Editorials
Tour Announcements
Concert reviews
Events »
New Releases »
Awards
Obituaries

World Music Resources
Artist biographies
Booking agents
Distributors
Travel Guides
Record labels
Mailing Lists
World Music Media
Organizations
Trade shows
Music Contests and Competitions

Live music:
Venues

Education:
Dance schools
Ethnomusicology
Museums
Music schools

Glossaries:
World dances
Musical genres
World Instruments

Shopping:
- World Music Central Store
- Gift ideas



Cuban Hip Hop Crosses Borders   
11/17/2004 10:30AM
Contributed by: ARomero

General News(Prensa Latina)  Havana.- Cuban hip hop crossed borders, beyond circumstances and fashions, while it counts on such experimentalists as singer-songwriter Equis Alfonso, stated the local media.

On his new album Civilizacion, Alfonso, son and heir of the avant-garde musicians who founded the band Sintesis, Latin Grammy nominees in 2002, shows no prejudices to mix whatever he grabs to make any track a smash.

The most characteristic feature of his work, a local reviewer stated, is the support given to hip hop as a referent to approach the musical representation of his time and the socio-cultural space he interacts with. The best achievement, on the critic's opinion, lies in the symbiosis of rumba tradition and hip hop.

As opposed to the experimentalist, the local newspaper Juventud Rebelde also comments the surfacing of a female rapper, La Fres-K, who launched her debut album Cambio de profesion, titled after an experimental cross included in the record.

Born in Guantanamo, the easternmost of Cuban provinces, she ended up in a movement where women are a minority. Her fame is underpinned by the protest and women-right fighter attitude she adopts.

One of the tracks included in the album, "Qué te creíste," is evidence of an independent spirit and an eloquent anti-macho pose, Juventud Rebelde stated.

However, in other songs, the feminine identity speech goes oversimplified. It strays from the path of authenticity using slang, while the rhythm atmosphere turns into nothing more than a folkloric appendix.

La Fres-K´s talent has been erroneously oriented to commercial exploitation which categorizes hip hop in the topics of fashion, the chronicler stated.

However, Cuba continues a music reservoir capable of taking the wide variety of universals tendencies in, he concluded.

  [ Views: 1,510 ]  

What's Related

Story Options

Submissions  |  World Music Forum |  Links |  Calendar |  Directory of Articles  |  F.A.Q.  |  Contact Us
World Music Central News RSS Feed

Powered By Geeklog
Created this page in 0.36 seconds

Hosted By Ibiblio.org .