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Cubanow.-
Grammy Award winner Ibrahim Ferrer tells his very
long life story in a very brief monologue to
Prensa Latina news agency:
"I was born in
Santiago de Cuba
in 1927. I liked the tango very much. I was a kid
when Alberto Gomez came once to
Havana.
He performed on a radio program and sang Life
in a kiss. I remember that. I liked singing
the tango because I watched a lot of films by
Libertad Lamarque, Jorge Negrete; they were very
popular in
Santiago.
When I started as a professional it
was the son. I have always sung the son,
because I was born in the middle of a party, in
the first place, and later there were parties in
my house. My grandfather was the president of two
societies in
Santiago,
one was called Club Aponte, where I was
almost born, and the other one was El Cocuye,
which still exists.
I was raised in music. We played
the rumba at the corner of my street when I was a
child, which is why I was devoted to the son.
I used to sing tangos and boleros, but when I
started, when I performed with three or four
groups, I sang the son.
The first group was Los Jovenes
del Son. A cousin of mine told me: "I am going
to make you a musician." He signed a contract to
play on New Year's Eve,
December 31, 1941.
We earned 1.50 pesos and got drunk, because we
believed we had won the world.
In late 1952, I began performing
with the Pacho Alonso Orchestra. With
Chepin, in 1956, I recorded El platanal de
Bartolo, which sort of made me famous. Always
singing dance music, they never let me sing
boleros. I loved to sing boleros.
In 1957 I came to
Havana
and in 1958 I worked with Benny More at the Ali
Bar. I began working with them through an
agreement, because there was not much work and I
had a family to support. Chepin's was the
orchestra that worked most, he needed me and I was
transferred.
When I came to
Havana
I lived in dire straits until I began working with
Benny.
When the Revolution triumphed in
1959, Pacho regrouped his orchestra again and I
began singing with him until late 1967. I did the
falsetto. I did either the first or the
second voice or the falsetto. Carlos Kerol
did most second voices with Pacho, and I sang a
lot with him; we were a duet.
Pacho's was the first group with
which I traveled abroad, in 1962. We participated
in the L´Humanite Festival, in
Paris;
afterwards we went to
Czechoslovakia
and the
Soviet Union.
Then Pacho left the group, we were so heartbroken.
I stayed with Los Bocucos as
the main vocalist, but they never let me sing
boleros. I recorded only one bolero with them, and
we had so many records. They didn't give me credit
either, but my numbers were hits. I got tired and
retired in 1991.
In 1993, I was at home shining a
pair of white shoes and Juan de Marcos came by
with Roberto Correa, who had been my director.
They asked me if I wanted to make a recording and
I told them that I was tired. And he said: "Don't
do that to me. I came here looking for you because
you are the only person that can get me out of
trouble."
His project consisted of a
recording with several singers. He had already
recorded with Pio Leyva, Puntillita, Tito
Gomez, Planas and he needed another one, and he
was told, "Get Ibrahim, he used to sing with
Los Bocucos." We went straight to the studio
and there I found Ruben Gonzalez, Eliades Ochoa,
and Compay Segundo, who I met for the first
time, because although we both were from
Santiago,
I did not know him.
Puntillita
was there. He began humming a song entitled
Candela, composed by Faustino Oramas, and I
began singing and playing. Ry Cooder and Nick Gold
were in the cabin. I had not met them nor did I
know who they were. Ry Cooder clicked; it seems
the cabin was open. He listened to me and liked
what he heard. He called me and asked me if I
wanted to record that song, and I said yes.
I had gone there with Juan de
Marcos to record a song entitled Maria
Caracoles with Afrocuba. Well, I said
yes to Ry Cooder and I recorded the song. From
then on I was enthusiastic. Ruben, who was very
restless at the piano, began playing and I did the
same. I got emotional when I saw the piano. I sang
Dos Gardenias para ti... I began singing
Dos gardenias (by Isolina Carrillo) and Ry
Cooder recorded it.
That is how I joined, without being
in the project, because I was not part of the
Buenavista Social Club project. I recorded
four songs. Afterwards, came the tours, the
Grammy. I did not even know what the Grammy
was, until I was told it was an award. I liked it
a lot.
I am still here, singing, and I
will continue to sing as long as I have strength."
(Cubanow)
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