People's Weekly World, 6/8/02
Concert Celebrates Cuban Music
by Gary Grass
[Courtesy of Cuban American Alliance, email CubanAmericanAlliance-subscribe@egroups.com]
MILWAUKEE - Over 200 people filled the First Unitarian
Church on Milwaukee's East Side Friday evening, May 24, to hear a benefit
concert for the victims of Hurricane Michelle in Cuba. The concert of traditional,
semi-classical and classical music from Cuba featured six musicians, including
Cuban flutist Ana de la Cuesta.
De la Cuesta, who played with the Cuban National Symphony
Orchestra and the Musical Theater of Havana before leaving the island in
1998, introduced her fellow musicians and described each piece as it was
presented. The program went through the history of Cuban music, beginning
with La Bayamesa and two boleros, "Se Fué" and "Profecia." In those
pieces de la Cuesta's flute was accompanied by simulated pianos, percussion
and other instruments she had arranged using a computer, seeking to maintain
the feel of the traditional songs. Her fourth number was the first of two
pregónes, songs that she explained were based on the musical hawkings
of streetside fruitsellers.
Ana Ruth Bermudez, a cellist and former conductor of the
Havana Chamber Orchestra, and Milwaukee Ballet pianist Vera Pawlak performed
the next few pieces, ending on a prégon by Ernesto Lecuona. Two
pleasant flute pieces rounded out the first half of the concert.
During intermission audience members were encouraged to
look at literature tables with information on the Cuban Five and to sign
petitions on their behalf. T-shirts and books were available about the
five Cubans who were convicted in a politically charged trial in June 2001
of espionage for monitoring the activities of terrorist groups operating
in Miami.
Members of the audience also enjoyed wine, cheese and
Cuban coffee. Many used the time to catch up on the activities of old friends
or to meet new ones. The youngest audience member, a six-month-old, was
also a big hit.
After intermission, de la Cuesta returned with a variety
of pieces, incuding a cha-cha-chá and a Lecuona habanera. Her last
solo was a composition of her own old instructor, Alfredo Portela, entitled,
"Fantasia
Sobre el Final de un Danzón." True to the title, the composition
mused on variations of the traditional five-note ending of the Cuban danzón.
De la Cuesta said the Fantasia was the most complex and
difficult piece she performed that evening, and of particular importance
as "a contemporary danzón with a lot of the elements of the original
danzón, which is our national dance music in Cuba." It was also
important to her to play it, she said, because - as evidenced by her performance
- it is just "a very beautiful piece."
The big finish came with de la Cuesta and Bermudez being
joined first by Venezuelan violist Carmen Danielle Pardo, and then also
Mexican violinist Dinorah Marquez, currently members of symphony orchestras
in Wisconsin, and acclaimed percussionist Luis Diaz. The rich quintet brought
the concert to a stunning finale. The entire ensemble played "Guantanamera"
for an encore.
The concert's proceeds were divided, with two-thirds going
to the non-profit Cuban American Alliance Education Fund for hurricane
relief and one-third to the educational work of the Milwaukee Coalition
to Normalize Relations with Cuba.
[The author can be reached at babette37@juno.com]