The culture clash seemed to excite and refresh artists on both sides
of the divide. ``Maybe we romanticize their lives because it's not all
about materialism, and maybe they romanticize our lives of plenty,'' said
Osborne, who has spent part of her week writing sexy blues lyrics for
Sergio Vitier's danzon. ``I'm just here to have a great creative
experience.''
And to put on a gigantic show. The excitement of celebrity permeated
the air, and so did a certain self-conscious tension, as if the Nacional
were a giant fish bowl with the world looking in. The musicians' week of
songwriting, jamming and recording will produce a concert at 8 p.m. Sunday
at the Karl Marx Theatre -- just hours after the baseball game between the
Baltimore Orioles and Cuba's National Team. International media flooded
Havana to report on how this gigantic weekend of cultural exchange would
coexist with the government's latest crackdown on political dissent -- and
to sit on wicker couches, eyes panning the scene for Bonnie Raitt, Woody
Harrelson, Gladys Knight, James Taylor, Jimmy Buffett, Ziggy Marley and
the other stars assembled here.
Police officers stand on almost every corner, and the Malecon was swept
clean not just of prostitutes but also of most of the people that hang out
there at night. And though the concert's U.S. organizer, the Los Angeles
nonprofit organization Music Bridges, insisted the project was planned
months before the game, the day seemed perfectly orchestrated for a
maximum media blitz.
Concert time not a coincidence
But despite the hype, pressure and organizational chaos, many of the
artists were finding a musical connection that was both surprising and
profound, one that against all odds seemed to be living up to Music
Bridges' idealistic vision.
``What matters . . . is we're no different . . .
what matters . . . is we have the same problems,'' sang American
singer N'Dea Davenport and Cuban singer Rene Baños, alternating
Spanish and English to create a funky, syncopated jazz tune that enlivened
one of the temporary recording studios set up at the Nacional.
Jose Luis Cortes ``El Tosco,'' leader of top Cuban dance band NG La
Banda, set up a makeshift studio where former Police guitarist Andy
Summers; keyboardist Fernando Sorias; Lucia Huergo, from the rock-fusion
group Sintesis; and singer-songwriter Brenda Russell were collaborating on
a song.
``It sounds kind of shlocky,'' Russell says at first. Cortes listens
intently, his smooth, dark face impassive. ``It sounds like a Kenny G
song,'' he concludes, and everyone laughs loudly. But the song changes
form, going from pop ballad to power rock, settling into a syncopated
Cuban tumbao -- its final shape. ``Coge el tumbao/como lo hago,'' (Now
you've got the hang of it/the way I do it), Russell sings, sounding out
the Spanish with Huergo's help. ``Hey, we're in Cuba,'' she says. ``We
might as well do it Cuban style.''
Pouring a rum drink after the session, Russell says, ``The
communication thing is hilarious . . . but it always works in
the end. Music transcends everything. When I think of not sitting with
these guys because of political reasons I just get really angry.''
Amazing Cuban
musicianship
During an electrifying concert Wednesday night by the Afro-Cuban jazz
fusion group Irakere, Amy Ray of the Indigo Girls sat literally
open-mouthed, and Me'Shell Ndegeócello leaped up to pump her fist
in the air, punctuating the standing ovation. Afterward, American
saxophonist Dave Koz approached bandleader Valdes, stuttering with
admiration. ``I, I, I don't have words to tell you how wonderful that
was,'' he said, introducing himself to the towering Cuban. Valdes replied
that he knew and admired Koz's music also. ``You DO?!'' Koz said, looking
as stunned and pleased as a child.
Alan Roy Scott, Music Bridges' founder and director and a songwriter
himself, knew that the richness of Cuba's music, and the island's
mystique, would be a huge draw for the American musicians. ``Major artists
have seen and done everything, and there are very few places they want to
go,'' he said. ``But everybody is interested in coming here. It's not just
a travel destination, it's a spiritual destination.''
Scott was aware that there would be criticism of the project,
particularly since it was taking place during heightened repression in
Cuba. ``Nothing is ever innocent,'' Scott said. ``I knew I was jumping in
the middle of controversy. But we're not collaborating with the
government, we're collaborating with the musicians. The connections people
make here will last beyond things that I can't control.''
Event out of reach
Michael Franti, leader of the hip-hop group Spearhead, and R&B artist
Montell Jordan did go outside the bubble of scheduled activities to
perform at a Cuban rap concert Thursday night in Alamar, a poor
neighborhood on the outskirts of Havana, where they signed autographs on
the backs and hands of ecstatic Cuban teenagers. ``Everybody here lives
and dies for hip-hop!'' said one excited fan. ``Everybody knows Montell
Jordan!''
But for the most part, the stars seemed just as painfully far away as
usual. Alexis Mendez, 29, had made his way to the Nacional's press office
with partner Victor Milan and an old-fashioned reel-to-reel tape of their
duo Al Animo, which they said mixed Cuban music with American blues and
country. Mendez wanted to know if there were any workshops for musicians,
or if the event would take place again. ``I'm a fanatic for R.E.M., and
for Andy Summers, but how can we approach him?'' Mendez asked, his eyes
bright and pleading.
Horacio Hernandez, a drummer for Santana and Roy Hargrove who played
with Irakere and Ruben Gonzalez before leaving Cuba 10 years ago, went to
Havana Jams with his father, and it inspired him to become a jazz drummer.
`` It was the first time we got to see American musicians live. For me it
was like -- WOW.''
Hernandez greeted old friends and signed a Santana CD for a Nacional
waiter. And even though he had painful memories of Cuba, including being
jailed at age 14 for playing in a rock band, Hernandez said the chance to
work with musicians from his country again outweighed his hesitations.
``Musicians have always been a very important force for change,'' he said.
``We don't believe people fighting is a way to solve things.''
U.S., Cuban musicians' unity bridges old ideological divide
Copyright © 1999 The Miami Herald