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Seated in the back of a squalid " Cafe Cantante
" in old Havana, where the only non-Cubans
beside myself were the wandering ghosts of Garcia
Lorca and Hemingway, I caught myself humming,
along with the sexagenarian singer on stage, the
famous tune of the divine Asmahane "ya habibi
ta'ala". After looking it up, I learned that
the song is titled in Spanish "el huerfanito"
(the orphan). Its topic is, as in the Arabic version,
the loneliness, the absence of Dad, Mom and Uncle
... Yes, songs have their impenetrable mysteries,
and composers go fishing quite far, sometimes
casting their nets across the oceans. The purpose
of my introduction is not to start a polemic regarding
which version came first (I know but will not
tell) but to explain how I came to be obsessed
by the against-natured fusion of Arabic and Cuban
music. Arabo-Cuban music was born.
It took me two years to find the Cuban musicians
and the Arabic singer who would bring to fruition
this unique musical experiment, and one year to
rehearse, record, mix and organize the tour. Having
lived in La Havana, the choice of musicians was
relatively " facilito. " I proceeded
to a "ven tu" (join-us in musical jargon)
choosing the best of the "músicos cubanos".
The choice of the Arabic singer, on the other
hand, was a real crux. I organized auditions during
which more than 100 girls tried out. Ungraceful
ones who sang well, pretty ones who sang flat
and gorgeous ones who could not sing. I saw brunettes,
blondes (all fake) and even a red-head. I heard
all kinds of sounds till the day when a friend
introduced Hanine (her real name). She was in
her last year at the Conservatory, studying singing
and Oud; she had a voice of honey and a degree
in law; she was smart, beautiful... in brief,
a music producer's ultimate fantasy. The project
had at last all the ingredients for success.
Fulgurating success was quick to come. The album
"Hanine y Son Cubano" entered the Lebanese
market the thundering acclaim, and remained, for
a whole year, the Top 1 best-selling album. It
met with similar success in Mediterranean countries
and the rest of the Middle East paving Hanine's
way to an international career.
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