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NBC News
19-03-2025
- Entertainment
- NBC News
In new ‘Buena Vista Social Club' musical, a legendary Cuban album comes to life onstage
'I'm not going to retire in any way,' she said. In the Broadway version, Portuondo is the star singer of the show. The distinctive details that have come to define her as a legendary artist are captured in the musical, from her signature style and personality to her emotional voice. Her son and manager, Ariel Jiménez Portuondo, said he thinks his mother "is well reflected" in the show. "They mixed Omara the artist and Omara's personal life," he said. Central to the musical's plot is young Omara's dream of making music for her people in Cuba at a time of political turmoil and the tensions such circumstances created between her and her late sister, Haydée Portuondo, who was also a beloved singer. For those familiar with Buena Vista Social Club's music, the new show feels intentionally designed to honor the legacy of artists like Portuondo, who fans remember popularizing the songs they hold dear to their hearts. But it also introduces the timeless music to new audiences. Theatergoers even get a songbook inserted in the show's printed program with a brief history of the songs included in the musical. One of those songs is "El Cuarto De Tula." The lively Cuban jam-style tune invites musicians to improvise lyrics, a homegrown tradition from the city of Santiago, the center of Cuban son music. But in the version made famous by the Buena Vista Social Club, the band added its own twist to the original musical arrangement, Torres said. Sitting at home with his laúd, a traditional string instrument from Cuba, Torres showed how he and the late musician Manuel "El Guajiro" Mirabal improvised a new intro for the song, which went on to become the version known worldwide. "Everywhere I go, people know who I am," Torres said. "They know my name, my last name, especially musicians." Before Buena Vista Social Club, it was rare to see a young musician playing classical instruments such as the double bass, according to Torres. But following the band's success, that changed. He recalled Old Havana being the center of musical quartets that kept their Cuban music alive. Now things are different, Torres said. 'A lot of music is being produced in Cuba, but it has nothing to do with Cuban music, with the rich tradition we have. The root is being lost and we have to rescue it,' he said, adding that the roots of traditional Cuban music must be preserved. Portuondo, Valdés, Torres and Eliades Ochoa alongside bandmates who have since died, including Manuel 'Puntillita' Licea and Mirabal — as well as Compay Segundo, Ibrahim Ferrer and Rubén González, who appear in the musical as named characters — burst onto the music scene with delayed fame almost three decades ago with the release of the Buena Vista Social Club album. The album was recorded in six days in 1996 in the historic Havana studio EGREM. It sold over 8 million copies, won a Grammy in 1997 for best traditional tropical album and was added to the National Recording Registry for preservation at the Library of Congress in 2022. 'Even when the project has stopped, the success was so big ... that it still hasn't been forgotten,' Torres said. 'When you think its time has passed, it is reborn. This time with the musical.' The musicians were brought together by Cuban bandleader and composer Juan de Marcos González, along with the British World Circuit executive Nick Gold and American guitarist and producer Ry Cooder. Their journey was also documented in an eponymous film released in 1999 and inducted into the National Film Registry at the Library of Congress in 2020. The project showcased music styles like son, danzón, boleros and others that were popular in Cuba during its golden music age of the 1940s and 1950s. The group was named after an old Havana live music and dance club. 'Buena Vista Social Club is a milestone in Cuban musical production and one of the most successful albums recorded in the 20th century,' de Marcos González wrote in a message to NBC News. 'What Nick Gold and I began as a cultural adventure without any grand pretensions, only aspiring to a positive impact on the so-called 'World Music' market, quickly became a mass phenomenon, unexpectedly similar to that of mainstream music.' The 'Buena Vista Social Club' musical breaks from the traditional theater format that separates the cast onstage from the musicians, who are often tucked away in the orchestra pit. In this version, those lines are blurred. The actors, dancers and musicians shine side by side on the stage — at times making the audience feel like they are at a concert, listening to live music at a dance club or just a fly on the wall in a recording studio. 'Buena Vista Social Club, the Musical, is a stunning work of art that transcends the values of a beautiful island, its culture, and its creators in a transparent way, free from the Eurocentric paternalism of other excellent related works,' de Marcos González said. While surviving members of the group are not directly involved in the show, they were consulted for the musical. They all hope the musical serves as an inspiration for younger generations who are not familiar with older Cuban music — in the same way such musical traditions were passed down in Valdés' family. Valdés studied music in Havana under the watchful eye of his father, Amado Valdés, a well-known Cuban jazz saxophonist. Now his daughter, Idania Valdés, sings in the orchestra her father helped make famous. She told NBC News: 'It will reconnect again, especially with young people who perhaps don't know so much about this project. It will reconnect with something that was always a hit.'
Yahoo
18-03-2025
- Health
- Yahoo
Families take on labor and costs of caring for their aging loved ones
Since 2017, three generations have taken care of Gladys Ortiz, an 83-year-old woman who lives in Miami and struggles with Parkinson's and dementia. Among them is her daughter, Yanira Portuondo, who views being a caregiver for Ortiz as a second, full-time job. "She's having hallucinations. Sometimes she doesn't recognize me. There are days that, going from the living room to the bathroom, she gets lost," Portuondo said. Without help, Portuondo says her mom "wouldn't last a week by herself." The family is luckier than some. Medicaid pays for a home care aide to pitch in 38 hours a week. But that still leaves 130 hours in a week — every week — where the family's spending time and money on her care. "Everyone has a life of their own, of course, but the priority is making sure she's okay. We try to make sure that everybody's needs have been met," Portuondo 70% of Americans aged 65 and older will require some form of long-term care during their lifetime, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services — and the cost of this type of care will likely be difficult to pay out of pocket for many Americans. "If you're not a caregiver, you'll either need caregiving or you'll become a caregiver," said Dr. Myechia Minter-Jordan, the CEO of AARP. That's why the issue is one of the organization's top priorities. "I definitely think it's a crisis. How do I make decisions about their care? How do I have the financial means to be able to do this?" Minter-Jordan said. In the U.S., family caregivers, on average, spend a quarter of their income taking care of loved ones, according to AARP. Some states are looking to help ease the burden. In 2023, Washington state added a payroll tax, money now used to fund long-term care insurance for its residents. A dozen other states are considering variations of long-term care taxes. AARP is also advocating for a $5,000 federal tax credit to benefit caregiving families. "It's not going away, and the problem is only going to increase," Minter-Jordan said. Meanwhile, Portuondo worries about the future — in 20 years, will her daughter have to care for her? "I could never have imagined I would be in this position ever," Portuondo said. "Most of the time, I'm exhausted. But every time she gives me one of those smiles, you know, it gives me a little strength to keep going." For millions of American families, caregiving is a labor of love that can demand every bit of both. U.S. Marine Band forced to cancel concert with students of color after Trump DEI order Restoring classic cars in the classroom How DOGE cuts are jeopardizing our national parks