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Porno Para Ricardo: rock music and the ‘obsession with identity’ in contemporary Cuba

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 August 2014

Tom Astley*
Affiliation:
9 Heaton Park View, Newcastle Upon Tyne, NE6 5HY E-mail: t.d.astley@ncl.ac.uk

Abstract

The desire to construct and define a sense of national identity has often been regarded as something of an ‘obsession’ in Cuban political and cultural discourse. Throughout the Revolution, rock music has consistently played some part in the making of a Cuban soundscape. Yet rock has often been seen as something of a threat to an ‘autochthonous’ construction of Cuban culture, and has often been denied legitimacy as part of the Cuban soundworld. Despite the rather liminal position it occupied throughout the revolutionary period, rock music in contemporary Cuba is as ‘obsessed’ with constructing, defining and reflecting a sense of Cubanness as more ‘recognisably Cuban’ musical forms. In this paper I explore some of the negotiations and conflicts in the music of the controversial rock band, Porno Para Ricardo: negotiations between traditional musics, the state and rock music in the perennial quest to define Cubanía.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2014 

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Discography

Porno Para Ricardo. Rock Para Las Masas (Cárnicas). La Paja Records. 2002Google Scholar
Porno Para Ricardo, ‘Comunista Chivatón’. A Mi No Me Gusta La Política, Pero Yo Le Gusta A Ella Compañero. La Paja Records. 2006aGoogle Scholar
Porno Para Ricardo, ‘Black Metal’. Soy Porno, Soy Popular. La Paja Records. 2006bGoogle Scholar
Porno Para Ricardo, ‘Mucho Corazón’. El Disco Rojo Desteñido. La Paja Records. 2009Google Scholar