June 2007Issue 401



Goza Pepillo


Without wanting to denigrate the achievements of Buena Vista Social Club (and its myriad spin-off solo projects), the album – as probably the biggest international hit for Cuban music in the past 20 years – also posed a problem. Here were musicians, great ones, in their sixties, seventies, eighties. Whatever else Compay Segundo, Ibrahim Ferrer and the band represented, it wasn’t the future of Cuban music.

Led by jazz pianist and composer Roberto Carcassés, Havana’s Interactivo have some answers on this, their début album. For a start, Carcassés extends the reach of the traditional salsa, timba and son rhythms with an injection of funk, rap and r’n’b. And with the combined power of poet-cum-rapmistress Telmary Diaz, singer Yusa and a big (but not too big) band, Carcassés has the courage of his convictions. On songs like ‘No Money’ and ‘Pa’que Enamore’, full-bodied funk vocals break the songs wide open.

Perhaps riskier is Goza Pepillo’s lyrical stance. ‘Los Revolucionarios’ – a marvellous groove employs a bit of electronic trickery and slinky fuzz guitar to turn up the heat – makes a not-so-veiled comparison between Cuban politics and its people to a failing marriage. If this enrages Castro, then their refusal to countenance floating to Florida (‘I’m not going! I don’t want to!’ they sing) won’t endear them to the vociferous anti-communist Cubans in the US. Clearly, Interactivo know their own mind, as well as music, and they’re not afraid of asking questions either.

Product information
by Interactivo
Star rating
***
Product number
DM0002 CD
Publisher
DM Ahora!




Language Tools
Powered by Ultralingua

Join over 10,000 people just like you. Get e-mail updates about new content, issue alerts, contests, and more!

other articles
FROM THIS ISSUE

Darfur – a history
A history of Darfur

Sick of promises
Jess Worth encounters a Darfurian community that’s demanding answers.

What next?
The future for the world can look bleak, dominated by technological and corporate power. But what if resistance to it won through? Pat Mooney tells a story illustrating how things might unfold differently between now and 2035.

Over a barrel
Leben Nelson Moro on the curse of oil.

Eupocalypse
Scary booklist of the neocons

recently
IN THIS COLUMN

In the House of Mirrors
New instrumental album by Hector Zazou and Swara

Everything that Happens Will Happen Today
The second album by David Byrne and Brian Eno

Big Blue Ball
Peter Gabriel threw open the doors of his Real World studios in rural England and invited an enormous bunch of musicians – Sinead O’Connor, Marta Sebestyen, Papa Wemba, Guo Yue are just a few of them – to come and jam.

Hear, O Israel: A Prayer Ceremony in Jazz
17-year-old rabbi’s son – and fledgling composer – Joseph Klein lured one of the greatest names in jazz (Herbie Hancock) to join in performing a jazz prayer ceremony.

Umalali
The Garifuna Women’s Project from Central America

Alive
Chinese Mongolian ‘Björk’ steps into Tibet controversy






Voices from the margins:

Multimedia: video, podcasts, and more.