Musical Cartographies of the Transnational City: Mapping
Transcription
Musical Cartographies of the Transnational City: Mapping
Musical Cartographies of the Transnational City: Mapping Havana in Song Author(s): SUSAN THOMAS Source: Latin American Music Review / Revista de Música Latinoamericana, Vol. 31, No. 2 (FALL/WINTER 2010), pp. 210-240 Published by: University of Texas Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/40985056 . Accessed: 29/04/2014 08:33 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org. . University of Texas Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Latin American Music Review / Revista de Música Latinoamericana. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions SUSAN THOMAS MusicalCartographies City: oftheTransnational MappingHavana in Song abstract: Over the lasttwo and a halfdecades,Cuban singer-songwriters havecomposed a worldviewthathas come to representCuba and Cubannessforyouthliving bothon and off inthisworldview, the island.Thecityof Havanafigurescentrally as a serving site,bothrealand foritsconstruction.The who were bornin metaphoric, songrepertoireproducedbymusicians the yearsfollowing the revolution is markedbyan almostobsessivefocuson the city, regardless of whethertheircareersdeveloped on or offthe island.Such songs have tended to be groundedinthe physical, takinglistenersdown specificstreets, traversing particular neighborthese songs on curbsand parkbenches,and visiting local landmarks. hoods,sitting Collectively, - forlisteners. - and itsmeaning forma kindofauralmap,witheach retelling the city redrawing For musicianswho have leftthe islandforothershores,Havana remainsthe destination of a ofthe discursive whichmaybe reachedinsong,ifnot inperson.Musicalremappings migration, inCuban diasporiccommunities and aroundthe world,celebrating citypositionnew identities the localat the same timethattheyredrawand superimposethe boundariesof authenticating neighborhood, region,and nation. ■ ■ ■ Cuban revolution, musicians, Cuba,transnationalism, cartography, singer-songwriters, keywords: Havana,cityscapes diaspora,nuevatrova,maps,urbangeography, RESUMEN: En los últimosdos decenios y medio,cantautorescubanos han compuestouna visiónque ha llegadoa representara Cuba y a la cubaníapara los jóvenes que viventanto dentrocomo fuerade la isla.La Ciudad de La Habana ocupa un papel centralen esta visión, El repertorio para su construcción. porque actúa como un sitio,tanto real como metafórico, a los años músicos han nacido en de cancionesproducidaspor que siguieron la revolución que de las carreras obsesiva a la se caracterizapor una atencióncasi ciudad,independientemente a han tendido basarse en el la isla. Estas canciones dentroo fuerade que ellos desarrollaron barrios visitando carácterfísico,llevandoa los oyentespor calles específicas, conocidos,senlocales.Colectimonumentos tándose en los contenesy las bancasde los parques,y visitando una desdibuja en donde cada vamente,estas cancionesformanuna especie de mapa sonoro, abandonado la isla han a la ciudad y su significado para los oyentes.Para los músicosque discursiva una que migración para recorrerotrascostas,La Habana siguesiendoel destinode musicapuede ser alcanzadapor medio de la canción,si no en persona.Nuevas cartografías les de la ciudadlocalizanidentidadescubanasdiaspóricasen comunidadesde todo el mundo, Winter2010 Volume31,Number2, Fall/ MusicReview, LatinAmerican ofTexasPress,P.O. Box7819,Austin,TX 78713-7819 © 2010bytheUniversity This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions MusicalCartographies City:MappingHavana in Song ■ 211 oftheTransnational el local al mismotiempoque vuelvena dibujary superponenlos celebrandoy autentificando límitesdel barrio,la regióny la nación. ■ ■ ■ cantautores, músicos,revolucióncubana, cartografía, palabrasclaves:Cuba,transnacionalismo, diàspora,nuevatrova,mapas,geografíaurbana,La Habana,paisajeurbano Streetsare thedwellingplaces ofthecollective.1 Tú tepareces a La Habana.2 -WALTER BENJAMIN -CARLOS VARELA havecomposeda Overthe lasttwodecades,Cuban singer-songwriters CubaandCubannessforyouth worldview thathascometorepresent living inthisworldbothonandofftheisland.ThecityofHavanafigures centrally foritsconstruction. This as a site,bothrealandmetaphoric, view,serving that Cuban considers thecartographic article singer-songwriters strategies in oftheislandcapital,beginning haveused in theirmusicaltreatment Doreen tothepresent from thelate1980sandcontinuing day.Borrowing ofthe specific renderings Massey,I positthatsongwriters' geographically anattempt todefine a definite but rather Cubancapitaldonotsignify space, one'srelationship to that a seriesofdiscoursesthatnegotiate constitute that both and and to the identities multiple persons placesexpress.3 space In the1980s,a fullgeneration aftertherevolution changedtheisland's cultural the centralization of Cuban and economic,political, landscape, cultural andinstitutional lifearoundthecityofHavanameantthatthenein ofsuchidentities wereincreasingly andexpression expressed gotiation D. urbanmetaphors. "Citiesthemselves," remarks Anthony King, explicitly "havebeeninstrumental notonlyin imagining theirowncollective identithecommunity ofthenation."4 As significant ties,butalso in imagining numbers ofsinger-songwriters havejoinedthediasporaandmovedabroad inrecent theprocessofreimagining CubaandCubannesshastaken years, on a newurgency. Musicalrepresentations ofHavanafigure prominently in theworkproduced theirincreasingly bymusicianswhomustnegotiate transnational identities and,as we shallsee,theyserveas muchtocontextualizenewlocalesas theydo theCubancapital. A poignant feature of"Havanasongs"composedinthelasttwodecades is theirexplicitly nature.Such songstendto be grounded cartographic in thephysical, downspecificstreets, particutakinglisteners traversing larneighborhoods, on curbsand parkbenches,and visiting local sitting landmarks. thesesongsforma kindofauralmap,witheach Collectively, This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 212 ■ SUSAN THOMAS - forlisteners. - anditsmeaning In his1994 thecity rendition redrawing Gillies us to of modern theater, John expandour study early challenged "if that kind ofspatial of virtually any remarking conception cartography, then of its material is a form, thefield regardless image map,theoretically as exploded. Moderncartography ofcartography is notso muchexpanded ofthemapin termsofproaddressesthisproblembyposingthereality in terms of a cessrather thanproduct; activity semiological (orsignifying) a signifying thanan inertartifact."5 rather SongsaboutHavanarepresent andtheiraudiencesduring thatservestoorientCubansongwriters activity betweenCuba, a periodofdramatically relationships shifting geopolitical Cubans,andtheoutsideworld.Suchstrategies helptheirsubjectsto"crethattiehisorherbodytoa mobility worldofimpressions atean imaginary Ronda aretobe at all effective, ofspaceandplace."6Yetifsuchstrategies LemkeSanford remindsus, "theyworkbymeansofsharedunderstandThe songrepertoire and conventions."7 producedover ing,assumptions, theshapingofsuchconventions thelasttwoanda halfdecadesevidences thattheybothrespondto and and understandings and theassumptions engender. La capitalcantada inthe1980s,a becameincreasingly visible Cuba'scapital city Songsdepicting of in as a creative focus timewhenpolitical manysectors emerged geography artist known the Cuban Cubanarts.Antonio Fernández, professionally Eligio ofcartographic abouttheimportance as Tonel, haswritten imagesofCubain ofEdward from thewritings theNewCubanArtofthe1980s.8Drawing Soja discussesCuban Fernández ofMichelFoucault,9 and Soja's ownreadings oflocalgeographies withcartographic artists' nearobsession representations indialogue withtheglobalart thattheirartentered atprecisely themoment Cubanartists' describes scene.Fernández repeated rendering (anddismemthis as or of the island of the during period "thecrystalmap image bering) thatcamein a consciousness 'insularconsciousness,'" lizationofa specific ofa radical as the center of Havana intellectuals' from Cuban conception part and America include Latin would that andrevolutionary cosmopolitanism andtranscultural ina transnational theThirdWorld dialogue.10 Overthe nextdecade,falloutfromeventsin Berlin,Moscow,and location thegeopolitical toreconceive creative intellectuals Sarajevoforced as thewindsofpoliticaland economicchangeblewCuba ofthatcenter, cultochallenge Artists usedtheirnewvisibility intothe"West." existing on Antillean reach the island's turalhegemonies amplifying bygraphically for seas. and a globalscale,displacing continents, shifting (See, example, whichappearshere artist AlexisEsquivel's geográfica, 1989work,Obsesión thesesame to local their In as Figure1.) however, relationship geographies, This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions MusicalCartographies City:MappingHavana in Song ■ 213 oftheTransnational figure i. AlexisEsquivei, Obsesión geográfica(198g). Courtesy ofAlexisEsquivei. narratives of geopolitical artistswerereactionary, reinforcing long-held and stasis. The island's external be fragimagemight stretched, privilege esor multiplied, butitsinternal locaters, mented, relocated, geographic roots the of fixed, deep pecially city Havana,grewincreasingly acquiring anchored in economics, andnationalist constructions of institutionalism, Havana.11 It was a remarks when all roads led to time, Fernández, identity. in thevisualarts,his WhileFernández was writing aboutdevelopments is in the thatsince analysis insightful considering 1980s Cubansingerhaveexhibited a similarobsessionwithgeography andplace. songwriters Itis nottheelongated contours oftheisland,however, thathaveattracted theattention ofsongwriters, butthecityofHavanaitself. Musicalodes to Havanaare hardlya newphenomenon. Indeed,like othermodernmetropolises suchas ParisandNewYork,thecityhas long beena musicalmuse.12 ForCubansongwriters, Havana'sallurehas transcendedbothtimeand genre,andtheyhaverepresented thecityto quite different effects. Earlyodes includeArmandoOrefiche's"Habana de mi amor,"SindoGaray'sbittersweet "Adiósa La Habana,"and Rolando beautiful bolero"HermosaHabana,"whichwaslater Vergara's hauntingly tobe immortalized The (and,onemightargue,urbanized) byLosZafiros. This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 214 ■ SUSAN THOMAS as in toauthenticate localcolor, landmarks havebeenusedbylyricists city's and mulata where an exotic themanyearly-2Oth-century sultry guarachas orEnriqueJorrin's struts downHavana'sPradoboulevard, 1951hitcha-chaand economiccenter Havana'sdrawas an artistic cha,"La engañadora." Mantancera's of from La Sonora has beenthefocus songs 1956hitwith to Colombian singerNelsonPinedo,"Mevoypa' La Habana," thetitlesong fromCándidoFabré's sonorieníaí-inflected album,La Habanaquiere guaradancemusic,in particucharcontigo, releasedin 2000. Post-revolutionary with ofnationalidentity, Havanaas a marker lar,has staunchly positioned songslikeLosVanVan's"Havana,sí,""La Habanano aguantamás,"and andinurbanexperience, Cubanpersistence "HavanaCity," documenting in explicitly urbanand and a nationalist pridethatis expressed genuity, modern terms.13 In contrastwithpreviousodes to a generalizedand romanticized ofher,thelate1980s Havana,orthecollective socio-political appropriation in whichthesongwriter's sawtheexplosionofa repertoire engagement andsongsdepicta cityseen, andintimate, withthecityis bothindividual of bothspace and at streetlevel.The representation and remembered, fromthenationto and a in reveals a debt these departure place songs trovamovement of the nueva alistpoeticdiscourseand identity politics belater. I will discuss as fromwhichtheseartists Songwriters emerged, of Cuban an assertion as of urban to write local, identity, experience gan itselfas the andre-assert hashadtore-invent an identity thatincreasingly amorhavebecomeincreasingly of"Cubanness" boundaries geopolitical at Cuban to an evidence These (or least attempt renegotiate songs phous. and they created that and within the it, places spaces identity habanero) thatpastbe personalor imagined, oftendialoguewiththepast,whether Michel "Hauntedplaces,"remarks as theexamplesbelowwillillustrate. de Certeau,"aretheonlyonespeoplecan livein,"and theHavana-song tolocalizenotjust repertory beguninthe1980scanbe readas an attempt well.14 as but identities, memory contemporary commented criticJoaquín andcultural Cubanjournalist Borges-Triana wherehe in a 2007 issueof Temas, on the"Havanasong"phenomenon and of such the between a made connection songs theconpreponderance He of Cuban experience emigration. writes, temporary con mentalidades La estanciaen el extranjero y culturas y el contacto senun e en estos extrañas compositoresintérpretes profundo provocan sus tradiciones de reafirmación de de nostalgia timiento autóctonas, y He artística. en su producción encuentran reflejo que conposterioridad a La dedicadas canciones abundan ahíla razónde porqué,porejemplo, Habana[. . .]15 This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions HavanainSong » 215 MusicalCartographies City: Mapping oftheTransnational mentalities and havingcontactwithforeign Livingin othercountries and a profound in these andcultures composers interpreters provokes that of their native of reaffirmation of and traditions, feeling nostalgia I reahave here the in their artistic reflected would be later production. . dedicated to Havana there abound forexample, sonwhy, [. .] songs inobserving thatthereareindeeda number is correct WhileBorges-Triana homesickness alonecannot theCubancapital, ofnostalgic odescelebrating ofsuchsongsnortheirimpact.In fact,songs explainthepreponderance as a majortropein Cubansongwriting to Havanafirst dedicated emerged but notofCubanémigrés, in thelate1980swhentheyweretheproduct ofhomegrown rather in,andabout,Havana. writing singer-songwriters The Role of Place in Nuevatrova ortrovadores. forsinger-songwriters, concern Placewasnotalwaysa central therevointhetwodecadesimmediately Indeed,songsproduced following A movement that lutionwerestrangely song placeless. socially-conscious the nueva trova in and first the late provided early1970s, developed 1960s ofsongfoundations forthegeneration boththemusicalandprofessional writers whocameon thescenein the1980s.Whilethesemusiciansmay in significant thatdiffer haveeventually waysfrom pursuedmusicalstyles I have all of the thenuevatrova tradition, performers spokenwith,or nearly mention themovement as f whohavegivenextended interviews, published and aesthetiformative an important influence, personally, professionally, in the1980sand afterwards cally.AnydiscussionofCubansongwriting ofthe theaesthetic andpoeticconventions musttherefore first recognize fromandagainst foritis thewaythatlatermusiciansworked nuevatrova, oflocalspacebothpowerthatmakestheirexplorations theseconventions fulandtransformative. and aesthetically withthecancióndeproitselfbothpolitically Allying canción testa(protest and nueva movements song) (newsong) takingplace LatinAmerica, theearlynuevatrovamovement featured a mix throughout and romantic that ofpolitical socialcritique, commentary, soliloquies were him whoaccompanied generally songwriter givenvoicebya lone singerorherself on theguitar. The powerofthewordwas paramount, and the movement valuedpoeticsophistication overmusical(andparticularly voto a revolutionary and evenUtopianZeitgeist, cal) virtuosity. Responding strove to createmusicwithtranscendental appealthatwould songwriters movelisteners toconsider otherrealities, whether social, theybe political, or emotional. recastCubansongas a genrethatwas intellecTrovadores tualandsophisticated, withpoeticimagery andmusicaltextures tomatch. This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 216 ■ SUSAN THOMAS theharmonic ofthejazz-inflected balladtraIncorporating sophistication ditionknownas filinand theavant-garde principles championed bythe de Sonora Grupo Experimentación (SonicExperimentation Group)at the Instituto Cubanode Artey Industria Cinematográfica (ICAIC),thegenre tookon a decidedly urbanandcosmopolitan aesthetic.16 The nuevatrovamovement was a nationalphenomenon thatbythe as Robin Moore becomeinstitutionalized.17 Cuban documents, 1980shad, to nationalandregional youthfromacrosstheislandflocked youthfestivalswheretheyhadtheopportunity tohearestablished musicians perform theirownwork,and be mentored Localcasasde cultura byolderartists. a (cultural capitalsalikeprovided centers)in smalltownsand provincial environment foraspiring trovadores tohonetheir spaceanda welcoming craft. Yetin spiteofthemovement's widespread appealandtheenormous talentbeinggenerated acrossthecountry, theinstitutional centerofthe movement in thecapital.Lastingconnections remained withtheICAIC, theInstituto Cubanode RadioyTelevisión (ICRT)and,mostsignificantly, withtheCasa de LasAmericas createdpermanent tiesbetween thenueva trovaandthecityofHavana.18 National wouldcomeatthecost recognition - oratleastfrequent ofrelocation tothecapital visitation.19 RobinMoorehas shownthatwhilethesocialist regovernment initially the trovadores7 stance as a it chose threat, garded sociopolitical eventually to better their themintostateappropriate (and control) messagebybringing runinstitutions.20 The Movimiento Nacionalde la NuevaTrova,officially - andoccasionally founded in1973,thusmovedfrombeinga critical oppo- voiceonthestateofthenationtobeingan official sitional for mouthpiece in thenationstate.Themovement a nationalist discourse which promoted Eventhename,"nuevatrova," castthemovement wasparamount. history tradition thatwaspopularin theearly as theculmination ofa songwriting toretrospectively as "vieja"or"old," yearsoftheCubanRepublic(referred the answer as the revolution was seen as tothefrustrated just 1959 trova), and unfinished of the and revolutionary struggles 19th early20thcentuis a and andromantic ries.21 with its tres, lyrics, Viejatrova, hongos pastoral of of Cuba's sonic reminder early-2Oth-century history migration powerful andincreasing urbanization.22 suchas theone thatlinked Foucaultnotedthatnationalist narratives, toa largerrevolutionary thevariousstagesofCubansongwriting struggle, Thistendency is marked timeoverspace.23 havehada tendency toprivilege ofthenuevatrova, whichproduced intherepertoire ofthefirst generation in its a songrepertoire thatis uncannily although geography, ambiguous revolutionarto important historic eventsor dedicated songscelebrating Pablo Trovadores suchas SilvioRodriguez, iesarerelatively commonplace. in a González Noel and Sara Milanés, Nicola, participated politicaland to Cuba'sinsularity, that avoided reference discourse focusing ideological This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions MusicalCartographies oftheTransnational City:MappingHavana in Song « 217 insteadontheinfluence ofthesocialist revolution on therestoftheworld. The Dec. 3,1972manifesto ofthefirst Encuentro Nacionalde los Jóvenes Trovadores madethemovement's internationalist aimsexplicit, "Nosprola creación de cancionesque expresen el espíritu interponemosestimular nacionalista de nuestropuebloy su altaconciencia de la solidaridad (We thecreation ofsongsthatexpresstheinternational proposeto stimulate ofourcountry andofitsstrong senseofsolidarity.)"24 spirit theeventsthatocApartfroma fewrevolutionary songsthatcelebrate curredat historically locations(CarlosGomez'"HabanaLibre significant wherespacesorplacesdo occur,theyare piso20" is a primeexample25), Liketheanonymous non-specific.26 generally junglesin SilvioRodriguez' "La era está pariendoun corazón,"thesesung geographies tendto be themetaphoric forideUtopianand indistinct, theyaremerely backdrop alisticstruggle. Whilenotreferring to didocexplicitly place,songwriters use the of within the casionally language political particularly geography, context oflovesongs.Suchgeographies are frequently sexualized, using theconquered contours ofthefemalebodyas a metaphor forrevolutionaryprogressas in "El breveespacioen que no está,"by PabloMilanés, whichrendersa lover'sbodywithimagery thatis explicitly cartographic - in mybedhersilhouette mi cama su silueta se cual ("en dibuja promesa etchesa promise"), orreproduces as in Silvio spatialized powerhierarchies "Oleo de con breve cintura sombrero," Rodríguez' mujer ("su debajode mi- hertinywaistunderneath me").27 The intellectual, natureofthemovement createdan atcosmopolitan where harmonic and textural innovation was mosphere prized,although thefullextent oftheyounger innovations hasnotalwaysbeen generations' It is in thelyric, thatthenuevatrova'sinfluence however, appreciated.28 is mostclearlyseen;themovement's social emphasison poeticsubtlety, and a belief in the of beena critique, profound power languagehas clearly forceintheworkoflaterartists. tookholdof guiding Younger songwriters thenuevatrova's thanusingthemtoexpressinterpoetictoolsand,rather nationalist andconstruct localidentities. goals,begantoexplore Flânerie Tropical Whilelocationmayhavebeenmoreofa practical thana poeticconcern forearlynuevatrovaartists, thenewsongwriters thatcameon thescene inthe1980shada markedly different totheroleofplaceintheir approach music.Bothlyrically andmusically, suchas Gerardo Alfonso, songwriters CarlosVarela,and FrankDelgadocreateda repertory thatcelebrated, crithelocal.Fortheseartists, thelocal tiqued,and,aboveall, experienced becomesa metaphoric oftheCubanexperience. In theirwork, exploration HavanaisCuba. This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 218 ■ SUSAN THOMAS Thesesongwriters created a musicalstyle thatwasmoreself-consciously overt often from thesoundsof urban,taking (and inspiration controversial) North and rock theirmusic music.29 While Argentine, American, English stressed international their stressed the however, lyrics cosmopolitanism, local.Bytheendofthedecade,urbanlifebecamethefocusoftheirsongs, and graphic ofHavanaservedas thebackdrop foracutesocial depictions andpolitical as wellas forlovesongsandnostalgic laments. commentary Theirlyrics tracedthestreets ofHavanawitha slow-moving voyeuristically todetail,eachsongrendering thecitymorereal. gazeandacuteattention In thissense,thefigure ofthetrovador thatemergedin Havanapriorto thecollapseoftheSovietUnioninvitescomparison withthebohemian flâneur of19th-century Paris.Educated, the male,andwithtimeforleisure, flâneur waslikewisean urbanfigure, an "eternal whospent vagabond,"30 histimeinthestreet thefabric ofcitylife.Indeed,fortheflâneur observing thecitywaslife;hisobsessionwithParisreflected thecentralized natureof French lifearoundthecapital.31 theprominence ofCuba'scapital Similarly, fromthelate1980sonwardis indicative ofHavana's cityin songswritten all aspectsofCubaneconomic, culincreasing gravitational pullon nearly life.Theaffinity oftheflâneur, a figure whoseexistence tural,andpolitical was propelled bythesocialand economicupheavalsofearlycapitalism, withsongwriters whodocumented boththeapexandthecrumbling ofa socialistexperiment seem were it not for the not initially apparent might of the spacesin whichtheywrote/composed. The Havana intervention itselfstrongly influenced Paris,shaped cityscape, bythatof19th-century theexplorations muchas thearcades andtheobservations ofthetrovador, andboulevards The Parisian ofParisformed theworldview oftheflâneur. flâneurand theCubantrovador thusemergeas figures whoserelationcitiesis both"a presentand immediate reality, shipwiththeirrespective made a practico-material as wellas "a socialreality andarchitectural fact," or of that are to be conceived constructed reconstructed relations of, by up drawonwhatJameson thought"32 (orinsong).Suchmeta(re)constructions Parisian has calledthe"nostalgia forthepresent,"33 andboth19th-century oftheurbanlandscapeoccupy andlate20th-century Cubanexplorations co-exist. an ephemeral spaceinwhichthepastandthepresent temporal In recentyears,theideaoftheflâneur has beenthesubjectofvibrant ofthe ascribedcelebration muchofitfocusedon thepreviously critique, in Feminist bohemian malewalkeras a "heroofmodernity."34 critics, parindescribing andcontotheflâneur havenotedthatgiving ticular, primacy of a certain set normalizes the idea of the modern power city structing Thustheallusionof as theyrelatetogenderandclass.35 relations, especially of tothetablewitha fullawareness an habanero flânerie mustbe brought of the exhibit trovadores' musical itslimitations. Indeed, city explorations race,and (evenin Cuba) politicsregarding gender, similarly problematic This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions MusicalCartographies oftheTransnational City:MappingHavana in Song « 219 entertain such class,andwhileitis beyondthescopeofthispapertofully a critique, itshouldbe notedthatthesongsdiscussedinthispaperarethe workofa predominantly and Havana-centered male,university-educated, ofwhomarewhiteormulato. themajority groupofsongwriters, Recognizofthe1980sbothwitnessed andwrotefrom ingthattheyoungtrovadores a position ofrelative andenriches ourunderstanding complicates privilege oftheconstruction ofCubanidentity, anditallowsus torecognize theways inwhichthisnewgeneration ofsongwriters pushedagainsttheideological oftheveryinstitutions discourse thathadnurtured them. AnkeGleberattributes theriseofthe19th-century Europeanflâneur to a new senseofindependence and a heightened awarenessof mobilofUtopianpossibility, thelate20thcenity.36 up on narratives Brought cameofage in an increasingly denseurbanenvironment in turytrovador whichtransportation wassparseand"awareness" ofone'smobility lack (or unavoidable. Thattherediscovery ofthestreet thereof), byyoungpeoplein thelate1980sandearly1990smayhavebeensomewhat forced lendsan elementofirony andirreverence totheirtreatment ofthecityscape. Ata time whenstatepolicydictated thatyoungpeopleservethepublicgoodbyenworkandexhibiting thewillgagingin productive propermoralbehavior, fulappropriation ofthestreetbyHavana-based trovadores an represents actofresistance. Theirworkrevealsan effort toturntherevolution's social consciousness andeconomicreinwards, local,social,political, critiquing the street and street culture share visible,songwriters ality. Bymaking similar to movements in the visual strategies happeningsimultaneously likeArteCalle,GrupoProvisional, and GrupoPuré arts,withcollectives and a irreverence towards reclaiming publicspace displaying profound institutional In this their treatment of urban authority.37 sense, quotidian existence canbe readas a formoí choteo, thatuniquely CubanformofhumorthatJorge Mañachdescribed as "notomarnadaen serio(nottaking More comic,the"jocularcontempt"39 anything seriously)."38 thanmerely ofchoteorepresents bothdisorder andsubversion andprojects irreverence towards forself-assertion power.Itis,as foséMuñozhas shown,a strategy thatappropriates andrepurposes cultural toaid in theconstrucsignifiers tionofidentities thatresistdominant cultural norms.40 The actionsofthestrolling trovador stand(move)in directopposition totheidentity constructs ofthenuevatrova, withitsobliqueavoidanceof in his songs,thetrovador/flâneur space.Bymakingthecitya protagonist drawsattention to the "conditions of [Cuba's]ownpossibility," working discourse oftheprevious torenderspace againstthehistorical generation itself visibleas an activeagentin Cubanidentity.41 Thissenseoftheawarenessofspaceis central toGerardo Alfonso's odetoHavana,"Sábanasblancas."A lyric Alfonso's hisdesireto"godownyour travelogue, lyrics express andyourplaces"andenterintoa spacewhere streets, yourneighborhoods, This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 220 ■ SUSAN THOMAS lives likeloversandwhereprivate andthepastareintertwined thepresent ofurbanlife. arepartofthepublicfabric Sábanas blancas WhiteSheets GerardoAlfonso Habana, miviejaHabana de Señorade historia conquistadores hermosa ygenteconsus religiones, dama Habana. Si misojosteabandonaran si la vidamedesterrara enun rincónde la tierra de yotejuroquevoya morirme amor yde ganas de andartuscalles tusbarrios ytuslugares. Havana, myoldHavana, ofconquerors Ladywitha history beautiful andpeopleofreligions, lady, Havana. Ifmyeyesabandonyou, ifmylifeleavesme ina corner oftheearth, I sweartoyouthatI willdieoflove andofdesire togodownyourstreets andyour yourneighborhoods places. CuatroCaminos, CuatroCaminos de Regla, de Virgen Virgen Regla theporttothesea, Puertodelmar places, neighboring lugaresvecinos thecoastalwall, el largomurodellitoral el Capitolio yPradoconsusleones, theCapitolandPradowithitslions, itsvisions. susvisiones. Whitesheets Sábanasblancas fromthebalconies. hanging colgadasen losbalcones. Whitesheets Sábanasblancas fromthebalconies. hanging colgadasen losbalcones. Havana, Habana, MigranHabana. MygreatHavana. in muchthesame spiritas thebohemiantravelAn urbanchronicle Alfonso'ssongguides by Benjaminand Baudelaire, oguesdocumented on the landmarks familiar at Havana's down thelistener streets, stopping witstoic and historic selects locations, crumbling explicitly way.Alfonso bustle the human while stasis nessesto architectural goes (andpolitical) themwithnewmeanings on aroundthemand in doingso he inscribes Itis as if,itseems,hisdesiremightsomedaycause andnewpossibilities. This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions Musical Cartographiesofthe TransnationalCity:Mapping Havana in Song ■ 221 thosePradolions(orperhapsthepeoplemovingpast)toawake.Alfonso's acts thatby"linking contention de Certeau's strollthusaffirms voyeuristic . become these words and andfootsteps, [. .] openingmeanings directions, Thoseliberated liberated spaces,de Certeau spacesthatcanbe occupied."42 on a second,poeticgeography ofarticulating have"thefunction contends, or oftheliteral, forbidden, permitted meaning."43 topicofthegeography voicesthissongnotfromthepositionofan whoactually ThusAlfonso, butfromhislocationin Havana'sVedadodislongingtoreturn, emigrant with inwhichthecity'sspacesareinscribed trict, imaginesa homecoming andinwhich"susvisiones" newmeanings mightbe revealed. and withtheunseen,domestic alsosuggesta familiarity Alfonso's lyrics facades spacesthatlie behindHavana'sbalconiesand crumbling private themundaneartifacts (see Figure2). Thewhitesheetsnotonlyreference buttheyalso callup imagesofunseen ofthelaborsofdailydomesticity, Alfonso'sHavanais, as Elizabeth bedroomsand hiddenacts.Moreover, and his deof19th-century Wilsonremarks Paris,"thecitysexualized,"44 Whether in explicitly carnalmetaphors. siretoknowthecityis expressed or a of with an old woman as symbolized "history conquerors," imagined Virginof Regla,Havana,likethe Parisdescribedby bytheAfricanized is notuniquein his female.Alfonso is inescapably flâneurs, 19th-century figure 2. Havana Balcony. Courtesyof Susan Thomas. This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 222 ■ SUSAN THOMAS sexualizedand genderedportrayalof Havana as a citywho has explicitly "relations"withher male occupants.CarlosVarelarefersto boththecity's promiscuousacceptanceofthosewho enteredherportand ofherfecundity in his song,"Habáname,"wherehe sings,"La Habana abriósus piernasy así nací yo."(Havana openedherlegs and thusI was born.)45 StrollingwiththePoetof Havana Varelais intensely Perhapsmoreso thananyotherCuban singer-songwriter, refassociatedwiththeCuban capital.Varela'smusic and lyricsconstantly blocksofthe erencethe streetsof Havana, especiallytheleafy,symmetric Vedado districtwherehe grewup and continuesto live. Called the "Poet he has been hailedas an urbanchronicler of Havana"by BeatMagazine,46 bycriticsbothon and offtheisland.Whethersingingofa younggirl'ssuicide by leapingfroma neighboringbalcony("Como un ángel," Comolos peces,1995), the suddenlyincreasingcrimeand corruptionthatresulted VafromCuba's headlongentryintothe touristeconomy("Tropicollage," relaen vivo,1991)or of stolenprivatemomentstakenwithinthe collective intimacyof the city("Sombrasen el pared,"Nubes,2000), Varela'ssongs - societal, use the local and the deeplypersonalto speak to largertruths political,and human. to place thatprovideshis musicwith It is, in fact,Varela'scommitment its aestheticand politicalpower.Some of his best knownworks,such as "JaliscoPark"and "Memorias,"(JaliscoPark,1989) use the cityscapeas a catalystfor exposés of longing,disillusionment,and brokendreams. "JaliscoPark,"forexample,uses well knownlandmarksto guidelisteners past the yellowwall surroundingHavana's Colón Cemeteryto the aging locatedon thecornerof18thand 23rdstreets.Varela'srecollecplayground tionofthegoldendaysofa parkthatyearslaterwouldlie rustingand dera pastthatis bothsharedand elictleads listenersto remembernostalgically the one like a lost, past that, experiencedby Benjamin'sflâneur,"always remainsthepastofa youth."47 Varela'sode to theyouthofhis generation,"Memorias,"famouslycalls to the children's up the icons of Cuban childhoodin the 1970s, referring cartooncharacterElpidioValdés, Soviet-madetelevisionsets,and the rationedallocationoftoys.In theopeningstanzaof"Memorias,"Varela'suse oftheneighborofurbanspace is general,focusingon thetranstemporality theslowpace oftruesociopoliticalchange: hood curbto illustrate Estoysentadoen el contendel barrio como hace un sigloatrás a vecesme pasan en la radio, a vecesnada más. This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions MusicalCartographies oftheTransnational City:MappingHavana in Song ■ 223 I'm sitting on theneighborhood curb like a just century ago sometimes theyplaymeontheradio sometimes notanymore. On his 2003 album,Siete,Varelawouldrevisitthesame curbin "El humodel tren,"a fastpaced,timba-inñuenced numberthatfeatures the CubandancebandLosVanVan.Theuse ofpopularCubandancemusicis a departure fromVarela'smoreinternational rockballadstyle, andVarela's reference totheearliersong'slyrics intheopening, "Heyman,sentadoen el conten,(Heyman,sitting on thecurb)"consciously callsup thestylistic difference as wellas thedecadeand a halfthatseparatesthetwosongs. If "Memorias" affirms in thesharedpleasures post-revolutionary identity andtraumas ofa childhood isolation andglobalization, "El caughtbetween humodeltren"is a recognition thatwhileso manymorefriends haveleft forothershores,thatcurbhasn'tbudged,and Varelacritiques those(inwho continue to observe from its cludinghimself) perch.48 Thealbumitself is a study incontrasts, thethicktexture and juxtaposing danceaesthetic ofthecollaboration withLosVanVan,sparearrangements forvoiceandacousticguitar, andthesonorities andrhythmic of regularity rockandroll.References tothecityofHavanaarewoventhrough theentire threadthatbindstogether thediversesonic album,becominga thematic textures atthesametimethatittiesSietetothesixalbumsthatcamebefore. Sietealso represents an overtrecognition ofthefactthatVarela'spopular successhas as muchtodo withhisinternational reachas itdoeswithhis localsensibilities, andthealbumwas aggressively marketed abroad.One ofthemostinternationally visibleCubanartists, Varelaroutinely travels outsideofCuba,concertizing the Americas in and throughout Europe.49 Audiences forhisperformances includelargenumbers ofrelocated young adultswhoseyouthexperience in Cubain the1980sand1990swasindeliblymarked byVarela'smusic.50 Likethenostalgic written Varela'ssongsprestravelogues bytheflâneur, enturbanlifeas "before allelsea system inwhicheventhemosttrivofsigns ial phenomenon is replete withmeaning," thatcan,whenlinkedtogether, "disclosea universeofsignificance."51 In a 2004 interview, Varelanoted thattheintimate and localcharacter ofhis songsis a metaphor through whichmoreuniversal messagescanbe understood. Se notala perspectiva, sobretodoen los textosde las cancionesque ai tenían unamiradamásde fotògrafo localyconlosaños principio quizás a descubrir con unavisiónun pocomásuniversal, aprendes que la soledad,que la nostalgia, que las rabias,que las ilusionesylas desilusiones sonigualesencualquier ciudad.O sea,da igualque sea NuevaYork, que This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 224 ■ SUSAN THOMAS sea La Habana,que sea Moscú.Inevitablemente estovieneconlosaños, conla madurezy conla posibilidad inclusoque te da tambiénmirara tupaísdesdeafuera. Teda unavisiónmuchomásabierta ymásextensa de la realidaden la que vives,poreso cuandoescuchaslos discostedas conla realidadcubana. cuentaque haytextos que siguenconectados Onenotestheperspective, in the textsofsongsthatin the especially of a local andwith had the perhaps viewpoint beginning photographer, to discover that lonetheyearsyoulearn,witha moreuniversal vision, in arethesame every liness,nostalgia, fury, hope,anddisillusionment this[unwhether itbe NewYorkorHavanaorMoscow.Inevitably, city, withmaturity, andalsowiththeposcomeswiththeyears, derstanding] fromtheoutside,thisgives thatyoucan also see yourcountry sibility inwhich ofthereality youa visiona lotmoreopenandmoreextensive youlive,that'swhywhenyoulistentothealbumsyourealizethatthere toCubanreality.52 arethemesthatstayconnected thespiritofthe Parisianflâneur, RichardBurton, writes, channeling whichseemsto apply a statement "Toutpourmoi devientallégorie/'53 his oeuvre,he ofHavana.Throughout equallywellto Varela'streatment utilizesdetailed references tolocalplacestosignify personalrelationships, stance.Varela'suse ofplaceand orsocialcritique, orphilosophical political canbe seenin "Ahora as a for the human experience geography metaphor from his están cambiando de color" los que mapas 1992album,Monedas en el aire.Composedfollowing thecollapseofthe SovietUnion,Varela ofoutdated international usestheboundaries mapsas wellas thephysical The musicitself as a politicalallegory. boundaries of Havana'scityscape themostextreme andis perhaps crossesgeo-aesthetic boundaries, example ofVarela'sappropriation ofan international sound,withcleartexpop-rock turalandtimbrai allusionstothemusicofStingandFitoPáez. Ahoraque los mapas estáncambiandode color(excerpt) CarlosVárela [...i cabezas Estánquemandoloslibros,estáncortando las cartassobrela mesa. Estánponiendoen peligro estánvaciandomercados en la tierra, Estálloviendo el pasado Estánjugandoa la guerra yestánborrando de color. Ahoraque los mapasestáncambiando Chino Cementerio Creoque estavezveotudestino Y abrirán tusviejaspuertasde unavez This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions MusicalCartographies City:MappingHavana in Song « oftheTransnational 225 Color NowthattheMapsareChanging [■••] offheads books,cutting They're burning tablein danger on the the cards They're putting areempty themarkets ontheearth, It'sraining is and the war past beingerased They're playing color. Nowthatthemapsarechanging ChineseCemetery I thinkthatthistimeI seeyourdestiny Andyourolddoorswillopenonceagain. fromthegeneraltothelocal,as he movesfromthe Here,Varelatravels globalupheavalscausedbythefalloftheIronCurtaintothemetaphoric of His merging openingoftheirongatesto Havana'sChineseCemetery. withan imagethatrecalls ofpolitical thegraphic representation geography The Cementerio is striking. thepoliticsoflocalhumangeography Chino, intheyearsfollowtheexodusofHavana'sChinesepopulation closedafter markers is oneoftheisland'smostpoignant geographic ingtherevolution, ofitscurrent reality.54 diasporic (See Figure3.) figure 3. Cementerio Chino(withgatesopen!).Courtesy ofAbilioEstévez. This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 226 ■ SUSAN THOMAS in "Ahora In hisreferences tothegatesoftheChineseCemetery que los in boats or to the ruined cambian de Park,"Varela color," "Jalisco mapas of with the of the local material connects community ephemeral metaphors Cuban with Varela' s connection who visit such Cubans spacesonlyaurally. on theislandis andfamily tofriends émigrésandwiththeirrelationship such as "Fotode andpersonal. artistic, Songs simultaneously professional, holthe Park"callup and "Jalisco "Detrásdel cristal," familia," exquisite endured lownessofseparation ylosque están"(those by"losque se fueron thatleftandthosethatarehere).55 Generation The Transnational aestotherather A generation ofmusiciansgrewup listening oxymoronic local soundandtheintimate, theticcreatedbytheworldly, cosmopolitan and others.ArmessageofthemusicofCarlosVarela,GerardoAlfonso, sankinto as Cuba's in the on the scene economy just early 1990s riving and inmaterial faced musicians the"SpecialPeriod," heightened young social a which Their stitutional music, sharp-edged merged challenges. soundsanda heightfusionofinternational criticism witha cosmopolitan nichecredid noteasilyfilltheinstitutional ened senseofdanceability, inthe musicians and stretched atedfornuevatrova, by challenged already and institutional of Havana's the apparatus unLacking support 1980s.56 number an themselves orsupport abletorecord financially,overwhelming lefttheislandfora multitude ofthisgeneration ofthesinger-songwriters withmusiciansinvarious acrossdistances ofdestinations.57 Collaborating Cubanaudifor write and musicians these locations, perform a primarily as thatofthemusiciansthemselves. encewhose"place"is as ephemeral withan acute theircareers in Havanahavedeveloped Thosewhoremained relationwiththeoutsideworld, awareness ofandparticipation cultivating music with international labels,traveling Europeandthe throughout ships with Cuban and collaborate to record and Americas, continuing colleagues whomovedabroad.58 basednotso muchon Thesemusicianscan be categorized together andmusiof ethos a shared as on musical or experimentalism style genre anda critical and socially ofentertaining a combination cal fusion, lyrics, worldwith a is blended that identification of local sense (Cuban) strong Whilesome contacts. andcultural viewmarked migration bytransnational ofthis themusicians todescribe tousetheterm"trovador" continue critics toas referred them to see common it is increasingly generation, becoming In a Cuban as translates which cantautores, literally "singer-songwriters." ofmusicalstylesthat ofa variety to thecreators refers cantautor context, thatthetermcarries inference with "man the far guitar" go beyond simple This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions MusicalCartographies City:MappingHavana in Song ■ 227 oftheTransnational thatwhiletheterm in English. Cultural criticDennysMatosacknowledges it is useful to themusic somewhat seem distinguish ambiguous, might both on and offtheisCuban musicians made bycontemporary being more to substance than of earlier trovadores.59 from that land Referring cantautor is a much wider and flexible of the Matos' s conception to style, Itis notsimilarities ofgenrethatconthanis typically imagined. category or diasporicsensibilbutrather a sortoftransnational necttheseartists, observed withthe"insularconsciousness" byFernández itythatcontrasts thetransnaThus Matoscan grouptogether in thepreviousgeneration. likeOrishas(basedin Paris)andNiloMC (basedin tionalhiphopofartists X Alfonso, the ofHavana-based withthedigitalexperimentation Madrid), fusionsofDescemerBueno,alongwithsongretrobolerosandworldbeat withmoretraditional acousticguitarorrockformat whoperform writers accompaniment.60 Madrid MusicalIdentities, In Postnational IgnacioCoronaandAlejandro on and writethatchangesin production, marketing, experience brought "turn" have caused the or transnational the relationships by postnational betweenmarginand centerto be renegotiated, raisingquestionsregardin a globalized andidentities performed ing"howaudiencesareimagined and new ofcitimusic reflects reflects how upon economy; understandings how it as a site of the works resistance nation-State; zenshipbeyond against of andhowthenetworks ornationalist formsofoppression; globalization distribution andconsumption become musicproduction, may(ormaynot) sitesofidentification."61 postnational intermsofethos Cubanmusicmaking contemporary Reconceptualizing intransforming music'sagency hithangenreallowsus torecognize rather is meaningful ofspaceand place.Music,MartinStokeswrites, erarchies identibecauseit"provides themeansbywhichpeoplerecognize precisely thatseparatethem."62 tiesand spaces,andtheboundaries Makingmusic ofbothCubanstateinstitutions andthemultinational muonthemargins sicindustry, Cuban and their borderless Cuban contemporary songwriters, an effort toconstruct a cultural andcosmopolitan cubania fans,represent thatlooksawayfromthestalepolemicsthathadpreviously Cuban framed nationalist identity. The Paris-basedgroupOrishasoffersan excellentexampleof how Cubanmusicianshavenegotiated theseboundaries, comcontemporary withdefiant biningcosmopolitanism displaysoflocalurbanknowledge to situatethemselves, and theirlisteners, withinan increasingly widencubania.One ofthemostinternationally successful ing,diasporic groups ofitsgeneration, Orishaswas formedin Francebyformer membersof theHavanarapgroupAmenaza.The groupis oftencitedforitsfusing ofhip-hopbeatswiththemelodiccontoursof Cubansonand rhythms This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 228 ■ SUSAN THOMAS andguaguancó andothersecular batadrumming drawnfromAfro-Cuban in its dancestyles.Theirfirstalbum,A lo cubano(2000), is remarkable their Parisian of Havana'scityscape, incessantretracing authenticating oftheCubancapital,both theirexhaustive knowledge productthrough the tracks on A locubano,10refer Of and 15 geographically linguistically. with severalnumbers, such to the of or city Havana, explicitly implicitly a central the and its as "Barrio" and"537C.U.B.A."making city geography focusofthelyrics. totheinternational dialingcode "537C.U.B.A,"thetitleofwhichrefers thecityofHavanafromabroad(53is thecountry usedtotelephone code,7 andlongingfeltby offrustration is thecodeforHavana),is an expression to pursuetheirlivesin thediaspora.The title'sconflation Cubansforced oftheways local(7) is indicative ofthenational(C.U.B.A.)withthestrictly thatartists livingoutsideofCubahaveused Havanaas a signforthenaofnostalgia. Thesongis basedonthe tionandas a sitefortheconstruction ofFrancisco harmonic Repilado'ssong"ChanChan,"which progression thereleaseoftheBuenaVista achievedinternational popularity following ofRepilado's SocialClubalbumin1997.In "537C.U.B.A,"thecitation song ora Orisha'sworkin Cubantradition is morethana toolto authenticate love affair with market's on the international to Ry attempt capitalize savvy musicalandfilmic successful CooderandWimWenders's produchighly tions."ChanChan"is also used as a signforthemigratory experience, a Cuetovoy andwhileitschorus,"De AltoCedrovoyparaMarcané/Luego LaterI go fromCuetoto paraMayarí(I go fromAltoCedroto Marcane/ tale of a traveling the is never cited, migrant longsong's explicitly Mayari)" door a woman to to a return opens metaphoric forOrishas'exploraing of Orishasplayofftheruralassociations tionoftheirowndiasporic reality. that calls with a chorus of "Chan thesonoriental Chan," up images style wellin keeping ofnationalism a representation oftheCubancountryside, musicalstylethatgivesthepieceitsharmonic withtheearly20th-century foundation. Vengode dondehayun río Tabacoycañaveral Dondeel sudordelguajiro sonar63 Hacea la tierra I comefromwherethere'sa river tobaccoandcanefields wherethesweatofthepeasant makestheearthsound urban. fora Cubathatis explicitly Theraps,however, expressa longing "flotando as homeland distant for the The anguished expressed nostalgia I go, el mapade estemundo(Floating andopasandomanoa mano/sobre in clithe overflows of this the hand over over hand world)," map moving iterawith an over Yotuel's as of the final verse mactic urgent rapspills song tionofHavana'scityscape. This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions MusicalCartographies City:MappingHavana in Song ■ 229 oftheTransnational CayoHueso,San Leopoldo, BuenaVista,Miramar, La Victoria, Alamar, HabanaVieja,BarrioNuevo, Bejucal. ¿Dóndeestástú,mi Rampa? El Solque Canta, La Catedral, se levanta. el Capitolio Que he oidode estascosas, 23y12,Vedado,PaseodelPrado, tusleonesladoa lado forman partede mistradiciones, misemociones ErestúmiCuba, Comotúninguna.64 CayoHueso,San Leopoldo, BuenaVista,Miramar, La Victoria, Alamar, HabanaVieja,BarrioNuevo, Bejucal. Whereareyou,myRampa El Solque Canta, TheCathedral, TheCapitolrisesup I'veheardofthesethings 23y12,Vedado,PaseodelPrado, yourlionssidebyside formpartofmytraditions, myemotions YouaremyCuba there'sno onelikeyou. us in morethan reminds Middleton as Richard us,grounds Repetition, is literal,usingthereand heretheattempted one sense,65 grounding a remembered within andlistener peatedplacenamestolocatebothartist a critical are of urban revisitations Such partof space cityscape. repetitive a sense also but of a sense not and place, remembering maintaining just artist CubanAmerican In MilkofAmnesia, ofCubanidentity. performance remembrances: of such the on remarks Carmelita importance Tropicana I wouldlie awake I used to playa gamein bed.Aboutremembering. theway I'd remember in mybedbeforegoingto sleepandremember. doorofmyhouse,cross house.I'd startatthefront tomybestfriend's houseon The first theporch.Jumpoffthreestepsontothesidewalk. The therightlookedjustlikemyhouseexceptithadonlyonebalcony. thirdhousewas great.Youcouldn'tsee it.Itwas hiddenbya walland sniffed I'd lookin,theGermanshepherd treesand shrubs.Whenever three me andbarkedme outofhisturf.I'd continue crossing walking, I did house. friend's best to I came until two blocks streets, my walking one But then remember. I would so I wouldn't thisrepeatedly day forget. I don'tknowwhathappened.Sometimepassed I forgot to remember. thethirdblock,thenthesecond.NowI can and I couldn'tremember I'veforgotten.66 house. to the third walk only ofHavanacanthusserveas an aidforimagrepresentations Cartographic oflocal urbanmarkers outparticular the or pointing ining reimagining city, the same in the and listeners For musicians cartographic diaspora, identity. onto canalsobe usedtomapmeaninganda senseofbelonging discourse newlocales.KelvisOchoa'ssong,"Cuandosalí de La Habana,"fromthe This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 230 ■ SUSAN THOMAS Habana Abiertaalbum24 horas,uses thesame strategies employ songwriters realto map Havanato situatebothartistand listenerin a new,transnational the a sort of screen view of Cuban The offer experience, ity.67 song'slyrics split Havanaand thesecondMadrid.The Havana withthefirst halfremembering and ephemeraldescribedin thefirstpartofthesongexpressesthemobility s out the of human Ochoa' citynotin physical memorymaps ity geography, a landmarksbutin peopleand in sound.Introduced by melodydrawnfroma Russianchildren's cartoonpopularin Havanain the1970s,theopeninglyrics listenin on Havana'ssoundscape(salsa. . . again)beforerecounting particular at a humaninteractions (a fightbetweenpolicemen,poetPinolimprovising Havanaitself(and localjam). Conjuredas a collectionofmemoryfragments, curbacrosswhichpeopleand sounds laterMadrid)becomesa transtemporal fromThomasTweed'sstudyof fleetingly pass. ReinaldoRomán,borrowing and "translocative" writesthat"[t]ranstemporal," diasporicCuban identities, dispracticesmap the "natallandscapes"ontonew locationsand transport placedpeoplesto a timebeforetheyweretornfromtheirnativeplaces,orto aredeterritorithefuture thereturnhome.In theseways,identities following elsewhere.68 and constituted alized,renderedportable, is preciselywhatoccursin "Cuando salí This kindofdeterritorialization de La Habana,"foras Ochoa leaves Havana forMadrid,thetextengagesin a new mappingexercise,plottingout streets,plazas, and clubs in Madrid, that mirrorsthe cartographicsongwritingpracticestypicallyassociated withHavana. Cuando salí de La Habana (excerpt) When I LeftHavana KelvisOchoa Madridcon su intensaPuertadel Sol (Montera,luego La Palma) Armandouna bulla en el Suristán Vanitose huracanaba Pasamos el veranito(so-so) Octubrese ostinaba Flotandoen el aire,aquel friopicó El gorriónque otravez se chocaba Teniendoyoque decir Hace caloren La Habana mi hermana Cuéntamede Madrid MadridwithitsintensePuertadel Sol (Montera,laterLa Palma) Makinga ruckusin the Suristán Vanitowas a huricane We passed thesummer(so-so) Octobergotobstinate floatingin theair,thecold struck theswallow(nostalgia)thatcrashed again and I had to say It's hotin Havana,sister, Tellme aboutMadrid This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions MusicalCartographies oftheTransnational City:MappingHavana in Song ■ 231 ofnew Ochoa'smapofMadridis a transparent one,a superimposition ontopofoldermemories andwaysofknowurbanspacesandexperiences reis thusa gamelikeCarmelita Tropicana's ing.His poeticgeography whose to remember a Havana yetratherthanattempting membering, Ochoa'scareful blurred detailsarealready cartographic (itis simply "hot"), ofMadridevidences a desireto name;to callstreets, construction plazas, or believable and clubsbytheirpropernames,thusmaking"habitable Cubanmusitheplace thattheyclothewitha word."69 Contemporary thecityno longerconstruct theflaneur's modernist cians'strolls through in whichwalking in thecitysignified beingawayfromhome.70 paradigm serves "home"is constructed thecity, andurbanorientation Rather, through tocounteract territorial displacement. is notexceptional Ochoa'sexercise amongCubanmusicians livinginthe Ela Ruiz's album Ábreme la Madrid-based diaspora. 2004 singer-songwriter odes to her natal Havana and her is anchored byjuxtaposed city puerta themadrileño barrio newplaceofresidence, her"madrede adopción," as "the marked ofLavapiés.Ela herself describes that "Lavapiés" my song arrivalto thiscountry," thenew cityscape's reproductive acknowledging ofherdiasporic a neighborhood identity.71 Lavapiés, powerin thecreation ofimmigrants, has alsobeenthesubjectofmusicalwalkabouts byGema figure 4. Habana Abierta, posinginfrontoftheLavapiésmetroin Madrid. Courtesy ofVanitoCaballero. This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 232 « SUSAN THOMAS andPavelandNiloMC,anditfigured in thepublicity prominently photofor Habana s first tour of the United Abierta' Statesin 2003,with graphs bandmembersposingin front oftheneighborhood's metrostation(see Figure4). Superimposed mapsand geographical playare also at workin Gema and Pavel'ssong"De NuevaYorka La Habana,"whichappearson their A doubledisccollection thatalsoincludesa book 2003album,ArtBembé.72 thealbum'sprojectincludesthe visualart,essays,and poetry, containing collaboration of Cubanmusicianslivingin Havana,Miami,NewYork, and MadridMusically, ArtBembéis a testament to hybridity, mixingthe andguaguancós withfunk, soundsofAfrocuban chants,boleros, religious theMadridsubway and andborrowed soundsfrom flamenco, soul,hip-hop In thistrack, PavelUrkizarevealsa deeply Havanasidewalks. songwriter in defining in theroleofcitygeographies seatedinterest andfascination thecontemporary Cubanexperience, andhe openlyplayswiththesuperalludedtobyde Certeau. imposedpoeticgeographies De NuevaYorka La Habana FromNewYorkto Havana Gema y Pavel (ArtBemhe,2003) Se rompióel tambor unatardedeldomingo en la EsquinaHabanera la rumbase NewJersey tembló, pusobuena las penas yse olvidaron de aquellasrumbas yse merecordé en el Central Park consartenes ybotellas Micaela! esa linda ¡Ay y dóndehabrásidoa parar? se fuela rumba Contigo delParqueCentral yel recuerdo Thedrumming began inthe one Sundayafternoon EsquinaHabanera NewJersey shook,therumbagot really good theirsorrows andeverybody forgot thoserumbas andI remembered in Central Park andbottles withskillets andthatpretty Micaela,ayMicaela! wheredidyouendup? withyouwenttherumba Park ofCentral andthememory Cuandoeraniña reunidos tocabanlosrumberos WhenI wasa girl and therumberos gottogether played ofPradoandOficios, onthecorner Thecomparsa playedfromthe Malecón toCentral Park,whatemotion! en la esquinade PradoyOficios la desdeel Malecónarrancaba comparsa arrollando que pal ParqueCentral, emoción! This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions MusicalCartographies City:MappingHavana in Song ■ 233 oftheTransnational Que borrachera, amanecer entrePradoyNeptuno la rumbayla gentebuena el cajónyla yno puedoolvidar rumba sonándome adentro yla clave llevando el compásde miguaguancó Whatdrunkenness toseethedawnbetweenPradoand Neptuno therumbaandgoodpeople andI can'tforgot thecajónandthe rumba within meandtheclave sounding thebeatofmyguaguancó carrying (coro) Del Central Park al ParqueCentral la rumbano tienepa' cuando acabar De NuevaYorka La Habana Columbia pa' los que tienenganas de bailar. (chorus) FromCentral Park totheParqueCentral therumba'snotgoingtostop FromNewYorktoHavana Columbia forthosewhofeellike dancing theNewYorkmetropolitan Here,therearethreelevelsoftranslocality: - Madrid.New not referenced but area,Havana,and, clearlyinferred commercial Habanera becomes a literal Havana street corJersey's Esquina neras Urkizawrites his recuerdos in yetanother distant rincón. Thesound oftheguaguancó functions as a mnemonic device,yetthemusicnotonly callsup memory; itsvibrations crossoverthemultivalent of boundaries bothtimeand space,recalling notonlythedistantrumbasof Havana's butalsothefamousCentral Parkrumbaswhichwereshut ParqueCentral, downbytheauthorities in1999. Musicalcartographies are ephemeral, quickto dissipateand decay, sureto fracture andmultiply. "Cadaventanaes un dibujodiferente de La Habana(eachwindowis a different ofHavana,)"singGemaand drawing Pavelintheirsong"Domingoa.m."73 Equallytheycouldhavesaidthateach a different thelistener toexplore the songoffers mapofHavana,allowing thecityas sound,thecityas lostdream,as future cityas person, possibility, as a seriesofstairsandstreets andasphaltandrubble.Astheroutestoand fromthecitybecomeincreasingly andwell-traveled, it numerous, twisted, willbe interesting to viewhowCubanmusiciansnegotiate thechanging transnational city scapeinthecomingyears. Notes 1. WalterBenjamin,"FromThe ArcadesProject,"in TheBlackwellCityReader, ed. GaryBridgeand Sophie Watson (Maiden, MA: Blackwellpublishing,2002), 398. This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 234 » SUSAN THOMAS 2. "You resembleHavana." LyricsfromCarlosVarela's song, "Detrásdel crisin thisarticleare bytheauthor. tal,"Siete(2003). Alltranslations and a ProgressiveSense ofPlace,"in Map3. DoreenMassey,"Power-Geometry ping the Futures:Local Cultures,Global Change, ed. Jon Bird, et al, (London: Rout- ledge,1993),65. 4. AnthonyD. King, Boundaries,Networks,and Cities: Playingand Replaying Diasporas and Cities," in Urban Imaginaries: Locatingthe Modern City,ed. Alev ofMinnesotaPress,2007), 10. Çinarand Thomas Bender(University 5. John Gillies, Shakespeare and the Geographyof Difference(Cambridge: Cam- Press,1994), 54. Quoted in Rhonda Lemke Sanford,Maps and bridgeUniversity Memoryin EarlyModern England: A Sense ofPlace. (New York: Palgrave, 2002), 3. 6. Tom Conley, The SelfMade Map: CartographicWritingin Early Modern France ofMinnesotaPress,1996), 20. Quotedin Sanford,4. (Minneapolis:University 7. Sanford,4. 8. AntonioEligioFernández(Tonel),"The Island,theMap,theTravelers:Notes 2 29/3 (2002), 81-93. on RecentDevelopmentsin Cuban Art,"boundary in Postmodern Geographies: 9. EdwardSoja, "History:Geography:Modernity," The Reassertionof Space in CriticalSocial Theory(New York: Verso, 1989), 11 10. Fernández,84. Such dialoguewas anticipatedtwodecades earlierin the inheld in Havana ternationalist Conference, objectivesoftheOSPAAALTricontental in 1966. 11. Fernández,80. on theinternet, 12. Listsofsongsdedicatedto Cuba's capitalcityproliferate parof Cuban deal the on sites or that émigrés.See, forexexperiences ticularly blogs ample,El Yoyo'sblog "Jinetero ¿ y qué?" http://www.conexioncubana.net/blogs/ and "La Habana a tododolor"http:// yoyo/2007/09/oi/cien-canciones-a-la-habana/ (theblog's titleis drawnfromVanitoCaballero's lahabanatodocolor.blogspot.com/ anthem"Habana a todocolor,"recordedon Habana Abierta's1999 album,24 horas. (bothsitesaccessed Feb. 20, 2009) 13. Vicenzo Pernaoffersvaluableinsightin the developmentof timbaas a speurban,Havana-centric genre.Vicenzo Perna,Timba:The SoundofCuban cifically Crisis(London:Ashgate,2005). oí CaliLife(Berkeley:University 14. Michelde Certeau,ThePracticeofEveryday forniaPress,1988),108. "Músicosde Cuba y del mundo:Nadie se va del todo" 15. JoaquínBorges-Triana, piece won an HonorableMentionawardin the Temas (Fragmento).Borges-Triana's magazine essay contest,2004. Availableat http://www.temas.cult.cu/premio.php (accessedDec. 1,2007). fromthefirstand secondgenerationsofthe 16. Therewere,ofcourse,trovadores nuevatrovamovementwho also drewon ruralmusical influences.AlbertoFalla, and AlbertoTosca standoutin thisregard,and thestylizedsones PedroLuis Ferrer, on Pablo Milanés' successivealbums,Años (1980), Años II (1986), and Años III (1992),notablycovermanyoftheclassicsofthevieja trova,unmaskingRyCooder and WimWenders's1999 ratherfraudulent attemptto presentsuch musicas "lost" nation. in island to those thesocialist in Cuban Nuevatrova,1905-1995, htnnomusicoiogy 17. Moore, Transformations 47/1(2003): 1-41. This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions MusicalCartographies City:MappingHavana in Song ■ 235 oftheTransnational 18. I do notmean to suggestthatotherCuban citiesdid nothavetheirown floweringofsinger-songwriters duringtheseyears.The cityofSantaClara,in particular, traditionthatcontinuesto thisday.Nationalsuccess, developeda richsongwriting however,has requiredrelocationto Havana or at least the investmentof considerable timein itsculturalinstitutions. 19. A list of "provincial"trovadoreswhose careerswere cementedin Havana includes Silvio Rodriguez(San Antoniode los Baños), Pablo Milanés (Bayamo), TeresaFernández(Santa Clara),AugustoBlanco (Banes, Holguin),and PedroLuis similarmigrationshave markedthe careersof Ferrer(Yanguaji).More recently, KelvisOchoa (Isla de la Juventud), VanitoCaballero Brown (Santiagode Cuba), RaúlTorres(Matanzas),and AldoAntonioGarcía(Pinardel Rio). 20. Moore.20-2Ç. 21. Cuban music criticshave also stressedthemedievalassociationsoftheword "trovador," playingup the associationbetweenthe strollingplayersof feudalEuto themas ropeand thepost-revolutionary poet-musiciansand frequently referring "iudares"or minstrels. 22. Moore pointsout the forcednatureof creatinga historiclineage thatlinks nueva trovaartistswithsinger-songwriters fromtheturnofthe 20th-century, noting thatthe highlyeducatedtrovadoresof the 1960s and 1970s inhabiteda sociomusicians politicalpositiondistinctfromthatofthelargelyilliterate, working-class ofcolorwho formedthebulkofvieja trovamusicians.Moore,5. It is interesting to note,however,thatit is the vieja trova,ratherthanits "successor,"thatexhibitsa sense ofspace. Songslike FranciscoRepilado'sfamous"Chan Chan,"forexample, documentthemigratory experienceofmanyruralCubans in theearly20thcentury. 23. Michel Foucault, Power/Knowledge: Selected Interviewsand Other Writings, 1972-1977,ed. Colin Gordon(NewYork,NY: PantheonBooks,1980), 70. 24. Quoted in Clara Díaz, Sobrela guitarra,la voz (Havana: LetrasCubanas, 1994), 270. 25. The 20th floorof the Havana Hilton,laternamed the Hotel Habana Libre, becamethecommandand controlcenterin theearlydaysoftherevolution. 26. TrovadorAmauryPerez's twice-recorded ode to Havana, "La Habana mía," in the (Licenciasdel Otoño1996; Amordifícil, 1998) can be viewedas participating populartrendforHavana songsin themid 1990s, ratherthanbeingseen as typical ofthenuevatrovamovement. 27. Lyricsfromtwo of the most famouslove songs fromthe nuevatrovaera: "El breveespacio en que no está,"by Pablo Milanés,and "Oleo de mujercon sombrero,"by Silvio Rodríguez.This analysisdraws froman unpublishedpaper by Susan Thomas,"La eraestápariendo:Re/producing SexualPoliticsin Cuban Nueva trova"Paperpresentedat FeministTheoryand Music 8. CUNY GraduateCenter and New YorkUniversity, New York,NewYork,June25, 2005. 28. See, forexample,thereactionsofmoretraditional trovadorasRitaRibadavia and Heidi Igualadatothedancemusic-influenced workofHabana Abiertain Susan in ContemThomas,"Did NobodyPass theGirlstheGuitar?Queer Appropriations poraryCuban PopularSong,"JournalofPopularMusicStudies18/2(2006). 128-129. 29. While these artistsdevelopedtheircareersand personal styles(as well as theirfanbases) in the 1980s, the combinationof difficult materialconditionson theislandand institutional inertiaslowedtheproductionoftheirrecordings, which This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 236 ■ SUSAN THOMAS onlybegan to appear at the end of the decade. CarlosVarela's firstalbum,Jalisco Park,forexample,appearedin 1989. All of his subsequentalbums and those of GerardoAlfonsocame out in the1990s. 30. Benjamin,399. CityReader, 31. ElizabethWilson,"FromTheSphinxin theCity"in TheBlackwell 419. on Cities,ed. EleonoreKofmanand ElizabethLebas Writings 32. HenriLefebvre, (Oxford,UK: BlackwellPublishers,1997),103. 18/2 Jameson,"Nostalgiaforthe Present,"SouthAtlanticQuarterly 33. Frederick (Spring,1989): 517-37. 34. KeithTester,TheFlaneur(London:Routledge,i994),6. "The InvisibleFlâneuse:Womenand thelitera35. See, forexample,JanetWolff, Culturee[Society tureofModernity," Theory, 2/3(1985):37-38;GriseldaPollack,"MoFeminism in Visionand Difference: and theSpaces ofFemininity," Femininity, dernity and theHistoryofArt(London:Routledge,1988); JohnTagg,"The Discontinuous Cultural and theDiscursiveField,"in Grounds ofDispute:Art,History, City:Picturing ofMinnesotaPress,1989); Field(Minneapolis:University Politicsand theDiscursive ArunaD' Souza and Tom McDonough'seditedvolume,TheInand,morerecently, Paris. PublicSpace,and VisualCulturein Nineteenth-Century visibleFlâneuse?Gender, Manchester Press, 2006). University (Manchester: and turnm Weimar a walle:tlanene,Literature, 3Ò. AnkeGleber,TheArtoj Talcing Culture(Princeton:PrincetonUniversity Press,1999), 29. ofTexasPress,2003). NewArtofCuba (Austin:University 37. See LuisCamnitzer, in Mañach: del choteo," Ensayos(Havana: Jorge 38. JorgeMañach, "Indagación EditorialLetrasCubanas,1999), 50. of 39. Damián J.Fernández,Cuba and thePoliticsofPassion(Austin:University TexasPress,2000), 31. 40. JoséMuñoz viewschoteoas partofwhathe termsa criticalcubama. See his discussionin Disidentifications: ofPolitics(MinQueersofColorand thePerformance of Minnesota, 135-141. 1999), 119-120; neapolis:University 41. de Certeau,95. 42. Ibid,105. 43. Ibid.,105. 44. Wilson,419. 45. CarlosVarela,Comolospeces(1995). (Accessed3/1/2009). 46. httpY/www.carlosvarela.com/prensa.asp 47. Benjamin,398. 48. The lyricsto "Memorias"recountsthe memoryof a childhoodfriendtaken neverto return. on a boatbyhis father, 49. Varelathus differsfrommanyyoungermusicians,who emigratedto other countriesto pursuetheircareers. 50. In a 2003 presentationin Madridof his album Siete,forexample,the au80% Cuban. Being in the theaterwas a bit dience appearedto be approximately likebeingat a high schoolreunion,as émigréswho had attendedthe "Pré"("preor high school) or University togethersuddenlyfoundthemselvesreuniversity" a formeridol. of the music unitedin anothercountry by This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions MusicalCartographies City:MappingHavana in Song ■ 237 oftheTransnational ofDaily Lifein Paris 51. RichardD.E. Burton,TheFlaneurand His City:Patterns 2. U.K.: of Durham, University 1994), (Durham, 1815-1851 withtheauthor.Havana,Cuba. Nov.1,2004. 52. CarlosVarela,interview becomes allegory."Burton,TheFlaneurand His City,2. 53. "Forme, everything For an exampleof Varela's allegoricaltreatmentof the city,listento "Detrás del cristal,"thefinaltrackfromSiete,whichbegins,"Túte parecesa La Habana," (you resembleHavana). The song maps Havana's landscapeontoa lover,projectingthe city'stragicdecadenceontoa beautiful,yettroubled,love affair. 54. Havana's Chinese inhabitants,and the neighborhoodthatrecallstheirabsence,is similarlythefocusofGerardoAlfonso'ssong,"BarrioChino"(El ilustrado caballerode Paris,2001),which,like "Sábanas blancas,"refersto specificstreets. on Varela's 2003 album Siete. 55. Lyricsfrom"Detrásdel crystal," whosesong "Divinoguión" 56. VanitoCabelleroBrownand AlejandroGutiérrez, about the cool was censoredbythe state-run media,sing receptiontheirmusic rein first recordedon their1995 ceivedfromtheinstitutional "Rockasón," apparatus todo,wheretheyperformedas the duo Lucha Almada.Afterbealbum,Entiéndolo comingpartofthecollectiveknownas Habana Abiertatheylaterincludedthesong on thegroup'ssecondalbum,24 horas(1999). Transnational:Locating 57. See Susan Thomas, "Cosmopolitan,International, Press of ed. Damián Fernández(University Cuban Music,"in Cuba Transnational, Florida,2005), 104-120. 58. Examplesof musicianswho have remainedin Cuba and maintainan internationalprofileincludeYusa,X Alfonso,WilliamVivanco,and thegroupFreehole Negro,as well as RoberticoCarcasses,whose musical collectiveknownas Interactivohas becomea siteforthemusicalrenegotiation oftheCuban diaspora.Recently some artistswho movedabroad in the 1990s have returnedto Cuba, feelingthat on theislandthanoff.Kelvis theycan now promotetheircareersmoresuccessfully Ochoa and David Torrensare primeexamples. 59. Dennys Matos, "Mala vistaanti social club: La joven música cubana," Encuentro 2003-2004), 67. See also JulioFowler'sresponseto 30/31(otoño-invierno Matos'sarticle,"A propósitode 'Mala vistaantisocial dub': Algunosdesacuerdos," Encuentro 33 (verano2004), 255-263. 60. See also JoaquínBorges-Triana, Concierto Cubano:La vida es un divinoguión Ediciones S. L., (Barcelona:Linkqua 2009). 61. Ignacio Corona and AlejandroMadrid,Postnational Musical Identities: CulturalProduction, and Consumption in a GlobalizedScenario(Lanham: Distribution, LexingtonBooks,2008), ix.The authorsdrawfromMicol Siegel'sworkon comparativehistoryand transnationalism, "BeyondCompare:ComparativeMethodafter theTransnational Review91,no. 1 (2005): 62-90. Turn/'RadicalHistory 62. MartinStokes,"Music,Ethnicity, and Identity," in Ethnicity, Music: Identity, TheMusicalConstruction Place 6. of (Oxford:Berg,1994), 03. 537C.U.B.A, tromOnshas, A lo cubano(2000). 64. Ibid. thePopular:On theSubjectsofPopularMusic(Lon65. RichardMiddleton,Voicing don: Routledge,2006), 137. This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 238 » SUSAN THOMAS 66. CarmelitaTropicana,"Milkof Amnesia Lechede amnesia" TDR 39/3 (Autumn1995),94-95. context,in Susan Thomas, "Cos67. The song is discussedalbeitin a different Transnational,"110-114.Full lyricsand translationare mopolitan,International, included. 68. ReinaldoRomán,"Identitiesand the Cityscape:On Religionand the Mapping of Spaces in the Late Colonyand EarlyCuban Republic,"unpublishedpaper presentedat the6th CRI Conferenceon Cuban and Cuban AmericanStudies,FlorFeb. 7, 2006. ida International University, de Certeau, 69. 105. 70. JohnLechte,"(Not)Belongingin PostmodernSpace,"in SophieWatsonand KatherineGibson,eds., Postmodern Citiesand Spaces(Blackwell,1994), 103 71. FernanadoMartín,"La cubana Ela une salsa, pop y mestizajeen el disco *Á brèmela puerta,'"El País, Dec. 31,2004. 72. Forminga duo in 1990, Gema Correderaand PavelUrkizamovedto Madrid, Spain in 1992 and theirsubsequentfouralbums were recordedthere.In 2007, Gema movedto the UnitedStates,whilePavelcontinuesto residein Madrid.They vol.i(2009) and and tourtogether, continuetorecord,perform, releasingDesnudos, a Ofrenda Borinquen (2010). 73. 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"Jinetero. 09/01/cien-canciones-a-la-habana/ This content downloaded from 95.183.184.6 on Tue, 29 Apr 2014 08:33:15 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions