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Havana Hip-Hop: Alive and Kicking By Mike Fuller   
11/20/2004 07:24PM
Contributed by: ARomero

Events(Prensa Latina)Havana, Cuba -Dusk at Havana's 100 thousand-strong bedroom community of Alamar brought together November 5 rappers and fans as part of the 10th Habana Hip Hop Festival. A city-wide event, it also included sites in Vedado and Nuevo Vedado, with everything from concerts to audiovisual presentations, exhibitions and conferences.

Called by some a "new kind of Cuban social song," it could be said to have roots in a musical tradition that goes back to folk singers like Silvio Rodríguez or Pablo Milanés. But with an edge.

And that edge sometimes slashes. Tonight's show included a write-in on the schedule, and improvisation can invite polemics. People were still talking about how the night before Escuadrón Patriota had issues from the sponsoring Hermanos Saiz association for singing outside of the program.

But Sátira y Mestizo's Jose Miguel Gonzalez and Lewis Cabrales, who met in the Army two years ago, made it in tonight, dressed in their usual military fatigues. They fired into the darkened bleachers discourse about African rebels like Patricio Lumumba and Agostino Neto who fought for their people and must be remembered.

Definitely not dance music, the lyrics were punctuated by a strumming syncopated beat, but even the most controversial was intended to have a positive message.

Wary of journalists twisting his intentions, Lewis is very clear about lyrics like "Hay que tener un socio lleno de pesos," or "One needs a partner with a lot of money." He told me that "to be able to change things, not only us Cubans, we need to count on collaboration, because alone it's not easy. Those of us with little need to unite with others who have more resources. Ours is a practical message we give to the poor of the world, but not necessarily ourselves. We consider ourselves underground and we like it." He said that as a matter of fact what they want is to "put in our grain of sand to improve things." Other groups may be less politically charged, and Malcolm Junco, director of Justicia for the last eight years, said about the recent US elections "The US people should not have voted for Bush, but I'm not into politics." Although he claims his music was rejected at a festival five years ago, he feels rap is pretty much accepted in Cuba now.

The group Desafio's leader, Mendoza , says their music is "a means of expression to make favorable criticism to improve the world." He said the US election was "a total fraud and truly sad for humanity. I write against war and social problems, and am pro-women and love." Luis Eligio was also on the scene, garbed in a construction helmet with painted face.

Member of the collective OMNI, which also does performance art and graffiti since 1999, they have a headquarters at the Alamar Casa de la Cultura. Pioneers in stage poetry, he said they'd like to see more interaction with the public, and opposed the fences put up between stage and crowd. His team fused with Zona Franca, a local rap group in 2001, and they try to stick to what he calls the "essence of rap, a spiritual street movement." He said the US election was a "game to entertain the world. Anyone they elect is a façade, and the real government is invisible. Power in the USA is an amalgam of Coca Cola, toothpaste, hamburgers and the best clothes, and is converted into virtual images. There are dissenters but they don't organize. But some real good Americans have come here."

Eligio said it's important for performers of this genre to be faithful to their beginnings, as groups like Krudas Cubensi, Anonimo Consejo and especially Explosion Suprema. This reflexive performer, who wakes every day at 5am to meditate, said it is fundamental to discover oneself, be aware of religious traditions, spirituality, music, politics, struggle and the search for God.

An almighty presence in the Alamar amphitheater may be debatable, but the spray painted images on the walls, the clarity of the sung messages and aura of the people was evidence that some power higher was alive. And kicking.

[Photo: Mendoza of the band Desafío].

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