Monday, October 26, 2015

Timbalive

#Timbalive is one of the current leading Timba bands in the U.S., founded by Miami based Cuban musician Leonardo Garcia (El Leo).

Leo's vision has been consistent to the further development of the great standards of Timba music outside the island, previously established by Cuban legendary bands in the 1990s like Van Van, NG La Banda, Manolin, Paulito FG, Isaac Delgado, La Charanga Habanera, among many others.

The Poet of Havana Trailer

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Gonzalo Rubalcaba join the UM Frost School of Music as new faculty. Will perform at Festival Miami 2015. October 22nd, 2015. 8:00 pm. UM Gusman Concert Hall

Gonzalo Rubalcaba—With Frost Concert Jazz Band

October 22, 2015 @ 8:00 PM
UM Gusman Concert Hall
Gonzalo Rubalcaba—With Frost Concert Jazz Band
Afro Blue Meets Cu-Bop and Post-Bop
GONZALO RUBALCABA, piano
SVET STOYANOV, percussion
Cuban-born pianist Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Bulgarian-born percussionist Svet Stoyanov and American-born trumpeter John Daversa met at UM Frost as new faculty. In this energizing program with the Frost Concert Jazz Band they celebrate the multicultural vibrancy of their new musical home inspired in part by “Afro Blue” by Mongo Santamaría and “Manteca” by Dizzy Gillespie. Rubalcaba also performs highlights from his illustrious career with new arrangements by Daversa and others.

«Festival Miami Event Listing

© Mario Garcia Joya
Prices Start at
$20 + 

Symposium: Cuban Popular Music and its Diaspora. November 5th, 2015. Hofstra University. New York.


Excited to be part of this event with great scholars and artists.

I will participate in a conversation about the presence of Funk in Cuban music with New York based #DJEdgaro, apropos of a documentary on the visit of #QuestLove to Cuba.




Program's Event


9 a.m. WELCOME
Pepa Anastasio, Hofstra University, Symposium Director

9:30-11 a.m.: TRANSITIONAL VOICES and BODIES
• Naomi Pueo Wood, Colorado College, "Las Krudas: Queer Hip Hop in the Diaspora"
• Susan Thomas, The University of Georgia, Athens, “Millennial Voices: Listening to Cuba’s Transition in Performance”
• Sarah Town, Princeton University, “Timbeando en Nueva York: The Roots and Resonances of a Music/Dance Form”."
• Alejandro Avilés, Hofstra University, Respondent

11:10 a.m.-12:30 p.m.: HAVANA SOUNDSCAPE
• DJ Session and Conversation: "The Funk Connection in Cuban Popular Music"
Documentary Screening: Quest for Cuba
• DJ Edgaro, Productor en Jefe
• Eva Silot Bravo, University of Miami

12:30-2 p.m.: Lunch (on your own)

1-1:45 p.m.: Global Rhythms: Workshop
Main Dining Room, Student Center

2-3:15 p.m.: DOCUMENTING THE MUSIC SCENE
Film Viewing: ANIMALS OF CUBAN MUSIC (Jen Paz, 2012; 70 mins) takes us inside a thriving music scene in Cuba to explore tensions between defenders of reggaeton and Cuban salsa who share their thoughts between live performances. Featuring: Gente de Zona, Charanga Habanera, Baby Lores, El Chacal, Bamboleo, Manolito Simonet y su Trabuco, Yulien Oviedo, Insurrecto, El Micha Cameos and interviews: Los Van Van, Mayito Rivera, Roberton, Los Intocables, Mandy Cantero, RDR, Team Cuba, Paulito FG, Jose Luis Cortes

3:15-3:30 p.m.: Coffee Break

3:30-4:30 p.m.: TRANSNATIONAL FLOW
• Johnny Frias, The Graduate Center, CUNY, “Havana’s Musicians in Miami: Promoting a Transnational Cubanidad in Cuba's Timba and Reggaetón"”
• Yesenia Selier, New York University, “Ven, ven, ven pa' que tu veas cómo está el tren! Cuban Dancing Bodies Transnational Circulation”
Wilfredo J. Burgos Matos, The Graduate Center, CUNY, Respondent

• 4:30 p.m.: Keynote Address: ALTERNATIVE MUSIC IN HAVANA TODAY
Dr. Joaquín Borges Triana, Havana, Cuba Joseph G. Astman
Distinguished Symposium Scholar Dr. Joaquín Borges-Triana is a music critic for several publications in Cuba, and author of several books on Cuban popular music. He is also editor at the art magazine El Caimán Barbudo; since 1988 he writes a weekly column as a music critic for the journal Juventud Rebelde. He is the author of Músicos de Cuba y del mundo: Nadie se va del todo (2012) and Concierto cubano: La vida es un divino guión,(2009). More recently, he has been a contributor to My Havana: The Musical City of Carlos Varela, University of Toronto Press, 2014, and editor for Cuba Counterpoints’ dossier on the role of intellectuals in a changing Cuba. Dr. Susan Thomas, University of Georgia, Athens.
Respondent Susan Thomas is Associate Professor of Musicology and Women’s Studies at the University of Georgia, and a specialist in Cuban music and music and gender studies.

6 p.m.: Reception

7-8:30 p.m.: Global Rhythms: Performance
Student Center Theater, Mack Student Center, North Campus

Global Rhythms is a cultural enterprise devoted to enriching society and empowering individuals and communities through Cuban dance, music and cultural education.