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Length: 4:37
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negro de nación.
Sin la liberttad
no pue'o vivi'.
Mundele cabá,
con mi corazón,
tanto maltráta,
cuerpo ta'furi eh
Mundele cumba flote
siempre ta'ngarua'cha.
queta' por mucho,
que yo lo ndinga
siempre ta'maltratá.
Yane me tabá
labio de buirí(x2)
coro Yenyere Bruca Maniguá.
Abre cuita buirindingo
Bruca Maniguá Ae.
Si ramento suaro suare
Bruca Maniguá Ae.
coro Ae, Chéchere
Bruca Maniguá.
Como un tienda derechito
Bruca Maniguá Ae.
Un paso, un paso
Ubbe Yobolle Ila
Bruca Maniguá Ae.
Ya yorrucu mandengo,
Bruca Maniguá Ae.
Yo son carabalí, son mandinga
quiero mi libertad Ae.
Congo tiene teremende,
Bruca Maniguá Ae.
Que esa negra
A mi me engaña,
Bruca Maniguá Ae.
Bruca Maniguá Ae.
Such wonderful music, just can't help but what to salsa the night away.
Loved seeing Ibrahim and the BVSC in concert on the shores of Lake Geneva. Unfortunately, it was one of his last gigs so I feel blessed to have had the opportunity of seeing him live.
You lucky duck! I wish I had been there too!
Loved seeing Ibrahim and the BVSC in concert on the shores of Lake Geneva. Unfortunately, it was one of his last gigs so I feel blessed to have had the opportunity of seeing him live.
After listening to the Miles Davis track before this and mentally having a scotch (hey, I'm at work still) and this fantastic Cuban music comes on, all I can think of is "what Rum drink should I have after my single malt?"
I'm thinking Canchanchara, yeah...that's what I'll order from the bartender in my mind.
Clearly it's after 4pm on a Friday ahead of a 3 day Memorial day weekend. Long Live RP!
I believe i've found my mental drinking buddy...
Trudeau will gift you with Cuba soon , enjoy
Yes my thoughts entirely. And I listen via a player so don't have the PSD option, so the volume just gets turned down a touch.
Broaden your horizons you should.
Yes my thoughts entirely. And I listen via a player so don't have the PSD option, so the volume just gets turned down a touch.
Don't rush that single malt! Some lines should not be crossed.
Hear! Hear!
After listening to the Miles Davis track before this and mentally having a scotch (hey, I'm at work still) and this fantastic Cuban music comes on, all I can think of is "what Rum drink should I have after my single malt?"
I'm thinking Canchanchara, yeah...that's what I'll order from the bartender in my mind.
Clearly it's after 4pm on a Friday ahead of a 3 day Memorial day weekend. Long Live RP!
Don't rush that single malt! Some lines should not be crossed.
After listening to the Miles Davis track before this and mentally having a scotch (hey, I'm at work still) and this fantastic Cuban music comes on, all I can think of is "what Rum drink should I have after my single malt?"
I'm thinking Canchanchara, yeah...that's what I'll order from the bartender in my mind.
Clearly it's after 4pm on a Friday ahead of a 3 day Memorial day weekend. Long Live RP!
Please could you explain what is strange about this? No, seriously. . . in my eye there is nothing wrong with 1. Old ladies 2. Smoking cuban cigars 3. Matching outfits. It is just your perception that is strange I'd suggest.
Mr SD,
sorry I have seen a substantial lady roll 'perfectos' on her massive thigh and thought nothing of it, whereas this photo, together with all the perfectly restored antique American cars for hire usually seen in tourist photos of Cuba, leave me unimpressed.
Best stop there.
These great artists would likely have been remained completely forgotten without Cooder's project. For whatever reason the Castro's didn't see fit to promote this part of the history of Cuba's rich culture. Perhaps it was because they were primarily pre-revolution and anything before the worker's paradise of the Castro family business is largely viewed with suspicion in Havana.
Thanks to Mr. Cooder for his vision despite being racially and nationally challenged in the opinion of his critics.
Get's a 10 from Billyburg Brooklyn.Thankfully, over time it has come up to at least a 7. I'm going with "small sample size" as the reason regarding your comment from two years ago.
It's a solid 7 or 8 in most people's minds.
Some people find authenticity challenging.
I am really shocked this one is not a chart topper.
We be (slow) dancing . . .
This song was composed in the 1930s by Arsenio Rodríguez, a Cuban music giant, when blacks were a brutally oppressed underclass in pre-revolution Cuba... the lyrics are a mixture of Spanish and African words, and Rodríguez expresses pride for his African heritage and he laments the injustices his people endured... lyrically, the song is from the persona of a slave seeking freedom by hiding in the mountains...
this is the very first Rodríguez song ever recorded, and the fact that it was recorded is kind of a miracle... the first recording was done by Miguelito Valdés, who has been called "as black a white guy as you would meet in Havana"... the arrangement of this song for the Ibrahim Ferrer album drawns directly from the original recording in 1937...
Arsenio Rodríguez claimed to have created "mambo music" — Mambo is a musical form and dance style that developed originally in Cuba, with further significant developments by Cuban musicians in Mexico and the USA. The word "mambo" means "conversation with the gods" in Kikongo, the language spoken by Central African slaves taken to Cuba...
this song is soooo cool... good to hear it on the best radio station in the history of humanity...
We be dancing... love it...
This song was composed in the 1930s by Arsenio Rodríguez, a Cuban music giant, when blacks were a brutally oppressed underclass in pre-revolution Cuba... the lyrics are a mixture of Spanish and African words, and Rodríguez expresses pride for his African heritage and he laments the injustices his people endured... lyrically, the song is from the persona of a slave seeking freedom by hiding in the mountains...
this is the very first Rodríguez song ever recorded, and the fact that it was recorded is kind of a miracle... the first recording was done by Miguelito Valdés, who has been called "as black a white guy as you would meet in Havana"... the arrangement of this song for the Ibrahim Ferrer album drawns directly from the original recording in 1937...
Arsenio Rodríguez claimed to have created "mambo music" — Mambo is a musical form and dance style that developed originally in Cuba, with further significant developments by Cuban musicians in Mexico and the USA. The word "mambo" means "conversation with the gods" in Kikongo, the language spoken by Central African slaves taken to Cuba...
this song is soooo cool... good to hear it on the best radio station in the history of humanity...
This music promotes strange behavior
Please could you explain what is strange about this? No, seriously. . . in my eye there is nothing wrong with 1. Old ladies 2. Smoking cuban cigars 3. Matching outfits. It is just your perception that is strange I'd suggest.
This round's on me, friend.
Ibrahim Ferrer in concert by ~NPU
Registration of the concert of Ibrahim Ferrer and Buena Vista Social club in De Oosterpoort, Groningen. Date October 20, 2004.
"El talento, la sinceridad y el sentimiento es la marca de esa generación de músicos cubanos, quienes sin duda se merecen un sitial de honor en el olimpo de la música universal!! Oda al maestro Ibrahim Ferrer y a la maravillosa Omara! Mil estrellas!"
"Grandiosos... me ponen la piel de gallina!"
"Ibrahim Ferrer in his last concert in Chicago.
Video taken and edited by Casey Mitchell"
"Juan de Marcos González y Afro-Cuban All Stars with Ibrahim Ferrer"
9.
It is dramatical and unjust that the recognition of this fantastic singer, a force of the nature, has only appeared to the eyes of the world in last years of life, until lived there with enormous lacks. Thanks to the persistence of another great author Ry Cooder, finally appeared in the musical scene.
Ace times the life is stepmother.
I had the luck to attend your performance a live and to evidence your enormous talent and joy of living.
In memory of Mr. Ibrahim Ferrer.
The saga of Buena Vista Social Club they are part also: Barzaga Luis (backing vocals) Orlando " Cachaito" López (double bass) Joachim Cooder (drums) Ry Cooder (to guitar) Juan de Marcos González (to guitar, vocals, percussion) Manuel Galbán (to guitar) Carlos González (bongos) Manuel " Guajiro" Mirabal (trumpet) Eliades Ochoa (vocals, to guitar) Julienne Oviedo Sanchez (timbales) Omara Portuondo (vocals), Barbarito Torres (laúd), Amadito Valdés (percussion)
and
Manuel "Puntillita" Licea (vocals) (d. 2000)
Máximo Francisco Repilado Muñoz AKA Compay Segundo (vocals, tres) (d. 2003)
Rubén González (piano) (d. 2003)
Ibrahim Ferrer (vocals) (d. 2005)
Pío Leyva (vocals) (d. 2006)
Anga Díaz (percussion) (d.2006)