Friday, July 27, 2007

Good Times (in la Gran Manzana) I

Puerto Rican band Plena Libre brought its gustoso brew of Afro-Caribbean dance tunes to the Big Apple on a recent date.

Our friend Gary Nuñez and his happy band of musicians just finished a gig in L.A. and told LTTM that Plena Libre was invited to participate on next year’s Playboy Jazz Fest in California. !Epa, hermano: A son de bomba y plena!



Gary shared with us his CD "evolución," a flavorful and upbeat mixture of plenas and bombas, ideal for any dance soirée.

A memorable night of dancing and good ol’time Boricua spiced fun, the musical ensemble had the audience literally dancing in the aisles, much to the dismay of the theater manager, our dear friend Lili Santiago Silva, !una Boricua de las bravas! Those fire codes that don’t allow for the public to “block” the aisles… But then, what’s a bunch of happy-feet Boricuas to do when you play bomba y plena to them? Explain that to New York’s Bravest!

We should give thanks to Lili for her efforts. The theater at El Museo del Barrio is doing its part to promote the Latino Culture and to preserve the valuable contribution by all Latinos, Hispanics and other Americanos here in El Barrio.
The Museo has prepared a very varied musical program this season's Summer Nigths at El Museo with two fabulous musical showcases entitled Musical Icons of El Barrio and The Alternative Music Festival.



(above)
Fofe, lead vocalist of the Grammy nominated Rock en Español group Circo, put the City on its toes at El Museo del Barrio's Summer Nigths at El Museo.

Get up and GO before it's too late! Summer Nigths at El Museo is held every Thursday afternoon kicking off at 6:30 p.m. sharp and it ends August 23. The event has already featured Tito Puente, Jr., Cultura Profética, Johnny Pacheco, Circo, Pistolera and Julissa and will also feature a tribute to the ill-fated salsero Héctor Lavoe, performed by Chino Nuñez and Friends, and the Spanish Harlem Orchestra, among many others.

Go to www.elmuseo.org for more information.

Monday, July 9, 2007

June – Gone, But Not Forgotten


Let’s call this humble literary effort a sort of Consecration of Summer; a way to cherish the season in all its beauty and life affirming qualities.

Following the wonders of Spring, with its flowers in bloom and its ambiance of benign comforts, finally the Northern Sun, which shines here as much as it does in the Tropics, yet with treachery at its extremes, moves closer to allow for some all-time favorite outdoor activities.

Welcome then to the hot dazzle of Summer. Those who can, flock to the Hamptons; those who can’t, well - same ol’, same ol’ (count me among the same ol’s).

Being that June is the un-official Hispanic Month (with the usual lunatic PR media fare and lame Latino-themed features everywhere you look), all Hispanics, Latinos and other Americanos hereby agree that the perfect opportunity for celebrating our varied heritage has arrived. Let’s all step aside from the everyday hustle and bustle of this workaday world and hold a month-long fiesta and toast our common roots with wine, rum, cerveza, tequila or mezcal, chibcha, vodka, scotch, chichaíto, sake, bilís, mamajuana. Whatever… Salud!

Now’s the time to take to the streets, avenues and plazas of this great land and make merry and indulge this glorious life and all it has to offer. Now’s the time to hold beauty contests, march in colorful parades, write glorious odes and make public proclamations of unedited and unsurpassed praise. Now’s the time to gather and cheer, sing and dance, jump up and do flips in mid-air. Who cares? And given the chance: perhaps we’ll even make love as demented rabbits do.

Just as in ancient pagan rituals of fertility, prosperity and adoration, let our spirits fly like flags; let’s show our colors, show all colors. Let’s take the time to get in touch with what and who we are and adjust the geography of our future; let’s show those around us what we are made of and that we are here - period! Come on - deal with it and lets party. Lives flicker and dim in millionths of a second (-there is infinite smallness as there is infinite bigness, both equally mind-numbing), and it takes an eternity (if not longer) to make sense of it all. So why bother?

The media, though, thrives on negativity, even the hallowed New York Times can’t resist resucitating an old (and well-covered by all media at the time it was first “discovered” several years ago) situation with guess what - the AIDS crisis in Puerto Rico! As if a dose of Puerto Rican bashing just prior to The Puerto Rican Day Parade, the City’s biggest celebration of its proud Latino presence, was deemed appropiate by the editors at that prestigious publication. A dubious decision indeed. Not a smart move at all. But that’s just my humble opinion.

At least I would hate to think that it was a show of biased journalistic practice or hidden political agendas…

Go figure. Then, again, that’s just me.

It’s almost as if the news media wants to make Hispanic Month look like North America’s Spanish-speaking residents have a monopoly on stupid behavior when indulging in celebrations. Hey, baby - we Hispanics, Latinos and other Americanos know how to throw a fun bash. Especially Boricuas in New York.

Of course, there is a big difference between what the law allows (and what common sense suggests) and what one is capable of doing in the midst of a wild party ambiance (believe me, I KNOW!!!!!). One thing definitely got nothing to do with the other or vice versa…(Wink! & Salud!)

Hey - shame on all those drunken, noisy Puerto Ricans! ¡Se les debería caer la cara de vergüenza! (Double Wink!! & Double Salud!!)

- To witness some very funny drunken Puerto Ricans and other funny s%@t from the Puerto Rican Day Parade go here:

http://www.sitv.com/blogs/whatshot/2007/06/13/puerto-rican-day-parade-madness-part-2/


Alongside the newspaper supplements containing idiotic guides on how to party like a real Boricua (or any Hispanic, Latino and other Americano for that matter) I for one would’ve loved to see an inkling of real and unified media coverage placing South American immigrants in this hostile land under real scrutiny, and under a fair light, taking into consideration our respective places of origin, our social and economic dynamics and our real contributions to this land.

- Go here for information on “Politics con Sabor” a new documentary film about the Latino presence in New York politics:

terramax.biz

- Go here for a review in Spanish by Max Resto of “Politics con Sabor” published in Puerto Rico’s El Nuevo Día:

http://www.endi.com/XStatic/endi/template/nota.aspx?n=239788

Yes, June is gone, la cruda is almost over (Thank God Almighty!) and life goes on.

:-b