古巴音乐在美国传播
时间:2015-08-14 00:25:19
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(单词翻译)
From the bolero to the mambo and from the rumba to the salsa, Cuba has a rich heritage of musical talent looking to take advantage of the renewed ties between Cuba and the United States.
Since the 1962 U.S. Trade
Embargo1, musicians in Cuba have struggled to take their music abroad.
Until the Bill Clinton
presidency2, it was not even possible to
license3 Cuban music for American distribution.
But with change on the horizon, Cuban musicians like Israel Rojas, a member of the Guantanamo pop group, Buena Fe, are hopeful for the opportunity to share their talent.
古巴音乐在美国传播
"For the musician's
guild4 you can imagine that this is an enormous opportunity. This country has extraordinary musicians, fantastic, they have a cultural force. Also, they are not even known yet,
legitimately5, as a result of this policy of survival, the policy of denial of our musicians to bigger markets where music is distributed as a product. It's an opportunity."
This move has opened up a new chapter of engagement between the former Cold War
foes6 with one of its next tasks being the
dismantling7 of the former economic embargo.
Another Cuban Grammy
nominee8, singer Cucu Diamantes, says that a more flexible American response to Cuban musicians will mean more exposure for local artists.
"If all U.S. policies towards Cuba start to be more flexible I think that Cuban artists will have more exposure, for example in the Latin Grammies. We have a large musical platform in Cuba but we have little presence in the Grammies."
In 2004, five Cuban Grammy
nominees9, including the late Ibrahim Ferrer, were refused visas by the Bush administration.
Ferrer's group the Buena
Vista10 Social Club went on to win the award in their category.
Now, amidst a warming of ties and Cuban Americans making up the third largest Hispanic group in the United States, orchestral director from the post-revolutionary Cuban musical group, Samuel Formell, says the U.S. is Cuba's most important music market.
Changes in Cuba have also made it easier for Cuban Americans to travel to Havana.
In 2012, Cuba reversed its blacklist on anti-Castro artists such as Gloria Estefan and Grammy-winning saxophonist Paquito d'Rivera.
For CRI, I'm Poornima Weerasekara.
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