M U S I C & M U L T I M E D I A
The Vexed Question of Multimedia…
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
…is it just a random mesh of sight and sound, or does some- | fun to look at, and Wenders simply left them out, a pardon- | ||
thing really new emerge? This gets another look in this issue | able decision cinematographically, but not an accurate pic- | ||
from Andrew Quint, who saw a performance in New York that | ture of what he surely saw. | ||
made him think the | But the wonder of the Buena Vista film, apart from the | ||
And I, along with anyone else who’s seen the Wim Wen- | sheer delight of watching it, is how it changed my hearing of | ||
ders film Buena Vista Social Club, now better understand | the music. (I should note that it’s shot in grainy video, but | ||
something simpler, but still important: How an extra visual | since Wenders is an artist, the grainy video becomes an | ||
dimension can help us understand music. |
| artistic element. It helps convey the otherworldliness of | |
This is Wenders’ latest film, and its title ought to ring a | Havana, a city literally crumbling, but jumping with life. The | ||
bell with people interested in Latin music, world music, or | colors are intentionally distorted, too, for an extra distanc- | ||
just plain good music, thanks to the Nonesuch Records CD | ing effect.) I knew, for instance, that the musicians weren’t | ||
also called Buena Vista Social Club. It’s a Ry Cooder project | young. But to see them – genial old coots in their seventies, | ||
(another of his explorations of | eighties, and even nineties – makes them come alive. | ||
styles), recorded in Cuba and featuring older Cuban musi- | We hear them tell their stories, too, and we realize some- | ||
cians who hadn’t performed for quite a while. I’d had the CD | thing else. These aren’t just musicians. They’re top entertainers | ||
for some time, along with others spun off from it, including | from another time, who know their business cold, even if they | ||
something credited to the | haven’t practiced it in quite a while. So for them, the Buena | ||
some of the same people), and a recent solo album spot- | Vista Social Club recording isn’t just a job. It’s recognition. | ||
lighting Ibrahim Ferrer, a Cuban singer with a tenderness, | Even more, it’s a kind of unexpected personal gravy. Never did | ||
sly wit, and radiant sense of rhythm that mark him, for me, | they think they’d play again, least of all with international atten- | ||
as an exceptional treasure. |
| tion. But they’re prepared. The old shticks – pianist Rubén | |
Wenders’ movie might be called a | González plays a solo moving up the keyboard, and when he | ||
and it helped me understand something about the musical pro- | passes the highest note, keeps on playing in the air – work just | ||
ject I hadn’t quite grasped. Ferrer apart, my first reaction to the | as well in Carnegie Hall as they did in old Havana nightclubs. | ||
CDs was to think the music was nice, but a little sloppy and | A trip to New York for a Carnegie performance is the cli- | ||
informal, traits I normally don’t mind (I love rock & roll, and | max of the film, and for the musicians, we sense, the climax | ||
how could I, if I didn’t like sloppy and informal?), but which | of their careers. “Que linda, linda, linda, linda!” cries one of | ||
struck me here as odd, maybe because I thought Cuban music | them, walking up Broadway. “How gorgeous, gorgeous, gor- | ||
should be hot and tight. Adding to my puzzlement was a recent | geous, gorgeous!” They all go to the observation deck near | ||
trip to Cuba, where I spent a week tracking down Cuban clas- | the top of the Empire State Building, and here – with Wen- | ||
sical music for two articles I wrote for the Wall Street Journal, | ders scoring a coup for both delight and honesty, by filming | ||
and which appeared there in May. It’s not that I heard any of | his stars exactly as they are – we see them searching for the | ||
the Buena Vista musicians (my loss), or even any musicians | Statue of Liberty, even though none of them knows where it | ||
like them (again my loss). But I got a shot of Cuba in my blood, | is or what it looks like, not even the one who swears he vis- | ||
heard a lot of other Cuban things on CD, and even spoke to a | ited it, many, many years ago. | ||
Cuban musicologist, who – maybe I took this out of context – | Of course I wanted to love their music. And I learned to | ||
suggested that the Buena Vista recordings aren’t all that | hear it differently. What was sloppy once (though I should | ||
remarkable to anyone who knows Cuban music well. | stress that not all of it is), is now adorable, in the spirit of the | ||
And then I saw the Wenders film. I’ll tease Wenders | search for the Statue. What was lively gets promoted to | ||
about one exaggeration, harmless but misleading – his many | completely irresistible, and what’s most important, most of | ||
shots of old American cars. These, it’s true, are a famous | the players and the singers gain individual voices. They had | ||
sight in Cuba, especially Havana, and for good reason. When | them all along, of course, but once I saw the movie, their | ||
the Castro revolution hit in 1959, Cuba was economically | individuality was magnified. “That’s the one who prays to | ||
and politically close to the United States (it was virtually an | Santeria gods…those are the guys who can’t stop playing | ||
American colony, with Havana essentially controlled by the | dominoes…he’s the one who’s 90, and can’t stop grinning. | ||
Mafia). American cars were naturally what people drove. | He says he’s working on his sixth child!” | ||
When the US broke relations with the Castro government, | Not that all of this, in some metaphysical subliminal | ||
American car imports stopped, and Cubans for a while had | form, wasn’t in the music anyway (and of course was part of | ||
neither money nor the chance to buy anything else. They | the reason so many people hear these CDs with such | ||
kept driving their old Chevys and Oldsmobiles, and still | delight). But the movie brought it out for me in implicit | ||
drive them, holding them together with spit and ingenuity. | stereo, 3D, surround, and holographic hypertrue reality. | ||
These ancient vehicles are a famous sight on just about | Go see the movie if it’s playing at an art house near you. | ||
any Havana street. But they’re not the most common sight. | And get the CDs, all on Nonesuch: Buena Vista Social Club, | ||
Most cars in Havana are creaky Russian ones, boxy and can- | Buena Vista Social Club Presents Ibrahim Ferrer, and “A | ||
tankerous, imported during the years when |
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| Toda Cuba le Gusta,” credited to the Afro- |
the Soviet Union was Cuba’s ally. They’re no | G R E G S A N D O W | Cuban | |
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