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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Cuban_rock
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Rock cubain Música rock en Cuba Cuban rock
rdfs:comment
Rock and roll music was introduced in Cuba in the late 1950s, with many Cuban artists of the time covering American songs translated into Spanish, as was occurring in Mexico at the same time. "The Batista police never looked kindly on Rock and Roll, and much less after the screening of films like Rebel Without a Cause and The Bad Seed, among others. After 1959, Rock and Roll followed the same path, although artists like Argentinean Luis Aguile emerged." Le rock cubain désigne le rock interprété par des groupes et artistes cubains. La interacción musical entre Cuba y los Estados Unidos es muy antigua. Ya desde el siglo XVIII, durante el dominio español de Luisiana (1763-1803), las orquestas y bandas habaneras ofrecían conciertos en New Orleans, y en el siglo XIX la contradanza cubana era muy popular en los Estados Unidos.​ A comienzos del siglo XX comienzan a crearse en Cuba las primeras Jazz Bands al estilo de los grupos norteamericanos. La Jazz Band “Sagua” fue fundada en Sagua la Grande en 1914 por Pedro Stacholy (director y piano). El grupo tocó durante 14 años en el Teatro Principal de Sagua.​
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dbo:abstract
Le rock cubain désigne le rock interprété par des groupes et artistes cubains. Rock and roll music was introduced in Cuba in the late 1950s, with many Cuban artists of the time covering American songs translated into Spanish, as was occurring in Mexico at the same time. "The Batista police never looked kindly on Rock and Roll, and much less after the screening of films like Rebel Without a Cause and The Bad Seed, among others. After 1959, Rock and Roll followed the same path, although artists like Argentinean Luis Aguile emerged." When Cuba and the United States broke relations, some people considered rock "the music of the enemy, the language of the enemy". Then, there was the time of the Cold War, the Bay of Pigs, the Cuban Missile Crisis and the uprising of armed bands throughout the country. Nevertheless, rock continued to be played. And though it didn't have a good reputation, it was tolerated. And though somehow its performers were considered to have a deviant ideology, many groups continued playing the genre. Among these were included Los Vampiros and Los Satélites. These bands were composed of black people and had a style similar to that of Limbo Rock in the United States. This was the origin of street rock. And the situation continued like that until 1965. Salvador Terry's Los Vampiros and Los Satélites helped keep Cuban rock alive and showed that black and mixed race people also loved it. From 1961 to 1964, they made people put aside the old quarrels and misunderstandings that rock was the music of high life of the white majority. Today, all the manifestations and subgenres of rock are performed in the underground environment are interpreted, no matter how atypical they are. La interacción musical entre Cuba y los Estados Unidos es muy antigua. Ya desde el siglo XVIII, durante el dominio español de Luisiana (1763-1803), las orquestas y bandas habaneras ofrecían conciertos en New Orleans, y en el siglo XIX la contradanza cubana era muy popular en los Estados Unidos.​ A comienzos del siglo XX comienzan a crearse en Cuba las primeras Jazz Bands al estilo de los grupos norteamericanos. La Jazz Band “Sagua” fue fundada en Sagua la Grande en 1914 por Pedro Stacholy (director y piano). El grupo tocó durante 14 años en el Teatro Principal de Sagua.​ La “Jazz Band Cubana” fue fundada en 1922 por Jaime Prats en La Habana, pero existieron grupos más antiguos.​ En 1924, Moisés Simons (piano) fundó una orquesta que tocó en la terraza del Hotel Plaza en La Habana, la cual consistía en piano, violín, dos saxofones, banjo, contrabajo, drums y timbales.​ Durante los años treinta, varias bandas tocaron Jazz en La Habana, como las de Armando Romeu, Isidro Pérez, Chico O'Farrill y Germán Lebatard.​
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