by jorge » Fri Aug 10, 2007 5:05 am
Quinto Governor II,
You say that the Yoruba Andabo version of Guantanamera is not really out of the ordinary, but when they first did that song and others in that guarapachangueo style, it caused a revolution in Cuban rumba.
I don't think that that particular recording of Guantanamera by Yoruba Andabo is on any of their albums, it seems to be a live video. There is a slightly different version of Guantanamera by Yoruba Andabo on a relatively recent (2003?) compilation CD called "Rumba pa'l Pueblo" on Pimienta label. If I remember correctly, there is an earlier version of Guantanamera by Yoruba Andabo, I will have to look around to see if I find it.
Speaking of out of the ordinary rumba, at that time, in the mid 1980s, Yoruba Andabo with Pancho Kinto, Rolando Rodriguez (Malanga el Rumbero), El Chori, and others, stretched the rumba out way beyond what Los Papines, Los Muñequitos, Conjunto Folklorico Nacional de Cuba, Afrocuba de Matanzas, and other rumba groups were playing at the time. Los Chinitos apparently started the whole guarapachangueo trend, but from what I have heard, Yoruba Andabo really developed it further and popularized it to the point that Clave y Guaguanco and other groups picked up the ball and ran with it.
The first recording I have heard of Yoruba Andabo, done with only cajones, is on an underground CD that has been called "Cajones Bullangueros". As far as I know, that was not released commercially as a CD, but is mostly from the sound track of a 1988 underground documentary made in Cuba called "Quien baila aqui: la rumba sin lentejuelas", directed by Elio Ruiz (who also made "En el Pais de los Orichas"). Fantastic documentary, it has interviews with Miguel Chappotin, Malanga el Rumbero, Pancho Kinto, and other original members of Yoruba Andabo, as well as Pablo Milanes, Juan Formell, and others talking about the real (noncommercial) rumba in Cuba.
I think you can download the entire Cajones Bullangueros CD in MP3 audio format from the Esquina Rumbera website. Chori plays some of the best quinto cajon you will ever hear, and Calixto Callaba is singing along with Chan and Giovani. This was recorded a few years before the Callejon de los Rumberos album, has some of the same songs played in an earlier, less polished (but in my opinion, more sabroso) style of guarapachangueo. Unfortunately, all the CD recordings I have heard of Cajones Bullangueros have been digitized off (probably the same) cassette tape and have a loud hiss in the background. Does anyone have a clean copy?
Edited By jorge on 1186725105