PROGRAM: FROM THE ® 85 TOUR OCTOBER 1 / 7:30 PM BING CONCERT HALL

ARTISTS PROGRAM Omara Portuondo, vocals This evening’s program will be announced from the stage. This program was generously funded by the Koret With special guests: Foundation. The Koret Jazz Project is a multiyear , piano initiative to support, expand, and celebrate the role of Anat Cohen, clarinet and saxophone jazz in the artistic and educational programming of Stanford Live. Regina Carter, violin

At 6:30 pm, join the National Jazz Museum in Harlem’s Loren Schoenberg for a conversation with Roberto Fonseca about his genre-crossing style and about the legacy of Cuban jazz today.

PROGRAM SUBJECT TO CHANGE. Please be considerate of others and turn off all phones, pagers, and watch alarms, and unwrap all lozenges prior to the performance. Photography and recording of any kind are not permitted. Thank you.

24 STANFORD LIVE MAGAZINE SEPT/OCT 2016 OMARA PORTUONDO As a soloist, Omara Portuondo accompanied label of , when an aborted Afro- While other much-loved Buena Vista stars like some of the great innovators like Arsenio Cuban project opened up some studio Rubén González and were lured Rodríguez and Isolina Carillo. Her first solo time. She was due to tour Vietnam but out of retirement, Omara Portuondo never album was not, as with other Buena Vista immediately recognized the importance of stopped—she has been continually performing Social Club members, after the release of reviving the old-school music and became in public since the age of 15, a legendary that groundbreaking album but was way back the only female member of the gang. singer whose voice reflects a long creative life in 1959, entitled Black Magic. of passion and music. She has been singing The album ricocheted round the world and professionally for an incredible 70 years, and After the revolution that year, Portuondo novelist Salman Rushdie called 1998 “that while revolutions and wars shook the globe, she carried on touring the States until things Buena Vista summer.” ’ stylish has carried on, with indomitable elegance. reached a crisis point with the Missile film added rocket fuel to sales of the album. Crisis and Cuban-American relations were Portuondo and Ibrahim Ferrer recorded Portuondo was born in the barrio of Cayo broken off. She and the Cuarteto d’Aida “Silencio,” and she had another gorgeous duet Hueso, in , Cuba, known for its were in Miami when her sister, along with drenched in nostalgia with Compay Segundo musicality. There was some scandal in the many other Cuban performers, decided to with “Veinte años,” a song she had recorded family. Her mother, Esperanza Peláez, came stay. Portuondo returned to Cuba and in a before and had originally learned from her from a wealthy family of Spanish ancestry way filled a gap left by the departure of so parents. who assumed she would marry a rich, white many musicians from Cuba, and her career man with a high social position. In fact, she flourished—at first with a reformed Cuarteto Her solo album in 2000 picked up a Grammy ran away with a tall, handsome, black baseball d’Aida and then, from 1967 on, as a solo artist. and was followed by the Brazilian-tinged player named Bartolo Portuondo. For years For a while she appeared in vocal events in Flor de Amor in 2004, which featured a they could not walk down the street in public, the socialist world and sang revolutionary song with family resonance called “Tabú” but the marriage endured. Bartolo was a songs and songs about and, about interracial love. Other recordings and friend of the national poet Nicolás Guillén later, . tours followed—a 60th-anniversary album, and a lover of music, and the house, lacking a Gracias, and stellar collaborations with Cuban gramophone, was filled with singing. The United States was off limits, but she jazz pianist Chucho Valdés. She was the toured with Orquesta Aragon in Europe first Cuban woman to be an International As a shy 15-year-old, she broke into the lush, and in Africa, where they still have a huge Ambassador for the Red Cross. In recent sequinned world of cabaret, and following in following. “Omara is a legend in Cuba, and years, she has sung everywhere from the Royal the chorus-line shoes of her sister Haydee, it’s safe to say there’s no one of my age Opera House in London to the Latin Passion she became a dancer at the Tropicana, the who didn’t grow up under her influence,” Festival in Hong Kong. glamorous club that still continues in Havana, Cuban-born ballet dancer Carlos Acosta a frozen relic of the decadent prerevolutionary says. “When I was a kid I’d see her all the time The best way to celebrate Omara Portuondo’s days. But singing was her forte, and she would on television, singing the kinds of songs my 85th year and 70 years of performing spend weekends singing American jazz with parents liked.” She was a versatile performer, professionally? A very special worldwide tour the blind pianist Frank Emilio in his band, but her speciality was a heart-rending which will include some exceptional invited Loquibambia Swing. romantic —she was often compared to guests. The great Cuban diva and artistic the great exponents of melancholy jazz like ambassador of her country wants to celebrate She sang in the all-girl Orquesta Anacaona Billie Holiday or Edith Piaf. She married and with a grand fiesta which represents the in 1952 and, with Haydee, in another female divorced and her son became her manager. impressive sweep of her career—on every group—Cuarteto d’Aida—a 1950s Cuban Omara, a documentary film about her career, stop meeting old friends and new to perform Spice Girls directed by and named after pianist won a prize at Cannes in 1986. much-loved Cuban classics from “Bésame . Things began to really move for mucho” to “Veinte años” together. The tour Portuondo, and the group was signed to RCA In 1997, just when she had hit typical will reflect different aspects of her long career, Victor, toured the United States, and backed up retirement age and might be expected to from her younger years and her continuing some of the biggest stars of the moment like slow down, the Buena Vista Social Club love of elegant cabaret, from the Buena Vista Benny Moré (“the Barbarian of Rhythm”), Edith project boosted her profile throughout days, and right up to the present with different Piaf, Bola de Nieve, and at the the world. Ry Cooder had heard her in tastes and flavors—a musical feast, full of Tropicana. This was at the peak of the glamour the mid-1990s, and she happened to be piquant sabrosura. (some say kitsch) of the famous nightclub. recording at Egrem, the national record —Peter Culshaw

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