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 much-hyped phenomenon might be real.

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 cross-cultural musical

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 Afro-Cuban All-Stars (featuring

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 high-class “making of,”

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

 

 

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 All-Stars.

 

 

 

 

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