Buena Vista Social Club (film)
Buena Vista Social Club | |
---|---|
Directed by | Wim Wenders |
Produced by | Rosa Bosch Ulrich Felsberg Deepak Nayar |
Written by | Wim Wenders |
Starring | Luis Barzaga Joachim Cooder Ry Cooder Juan de Marcos González Julio Alberto Fernández Ibrahim Ferrer Carlos González Rubén González Salvador Repilado Labrada Pío Leyva Manuel "Puntillita" Licea Orlando "Cachaito" López Benito Suárez Magana Manuel "Guajiro" Mirabal Eliades Ochoa Omara Portuondo Julienne Oviedo Sánchez Compay Segundo Barbarito Torres Alberto 'Virgilio' Valdés Amadito Valdés Lázaro Villa |
Edited by | Monica Anderson Brian Johnson |
Distributed by | Axiom Films (UK and Ireland) StudioCanal (Germany) |
Release dates
|
17 February 1999 (Berlin International Film Festival) 4 June 1999 (USA) |
Running time
|
105 min. |
Country | Germany United States United Kingdom France Cuba |
Language | English / Spanish |
Budget | N/A |
Box office | $23,002,182[1] |
Buena Vista Social Club (1999) is a documentary film by Wim Wenders about the music of Cuba. It is named for a danzón that became the title piece of the album Buena Vista Social Club.
Contents
Synopsis
The film documents how Ry Cooder, long-time friend of Wenders, brought together the ensemble of legendary Cuban musicians to record an album (also called Buena Vista Social Club) and to perform two times with a full line-up: in April 1998 in Amsterdam (two nights) and the 1st of July 1998 in the United States (at the Carnegie Hall, New York City). Although they are geographically close, travel between Cuba and the United States is restricted due to the political tension between the two countries, so many of the artists were travelling there for the first time. The film shows their reactions to this experience, as well as including footage of the resultant sell-out concert. It also includes interviews with each of the main performers.
Influence
The film helped the musicians, some of them already in their nineties, become known to a worldwide audience, with some going on to release popular solo albums. These included Ibrahim Ferrer, Compay Segundo, Rubén González and Elíades Ochoa. The latter went on to support younger musicians making the same style of music beyond 2010 under the name "Buena Vista Social Club".
Awards
The film was nominated for an Academy Award for best documentary feature in 2000.[2] It won as best documentary in the European Film Awards as well as many others. The album Buena Vista Social Club features studio versions of the music heard in the movie.
Musicians (in order of appearance)
- Francisco Repilado, aka Compay Segundo (vocals and tres)
- Eliades Ochoa (vocals and guitar)
- Ry Cooder (slide guitar)
- Joachim Cooder, his son (percussion)
- Ibrahim Ferrer (vocals, congas, claves, bongos)
- Omara Portuondo (vocals)
- Rubén González (piano)
- Orlando "Cachaito" López (Double bass)
- Amadito Valdés
- Manuel "Guajiro" Mirabal (trumpet)
- Barbarito Torres (Laúd)
- Pío Leyva
- Manuel "Puntillita" Licea (vocals)
- Juan de Marcos González (güiro)
Songs in the film (in order of appearance)
- "Chan Chan" (Francisco Repilado)
- "Silencio" (Rafael Hernandez)
- "Chattanooga Choo Choo" (Harry Warren and Mack Gordon)
- "Dos Gardenias" (Isolina Carillo)
- "Veinte Años" (María Teresa Vera),
- "Y Tu Que Has Hecho?" (Eusebio Delfin),
- "Black Bottom" (Ray Henderson, Lew Brown and B. G. De Sylva)
- "Canto Siboney" (Ernesto Lecuona Casado),
- "El Carretero" (Jose "Guillermo Portabales" Quesada del Castillo)
- "Cienfuegos (tiene su guaguanco)" (Victor Lay)
- "Begin The Beguine" (Cole Porter)
- "Buena Vista Social Club" (Orestes Lopez, inventor of the mambo in 1937)
- "Mandinga" (also known as "Bilongo", Guillermo Rodriguez Fiffe)
- "Candela" (Faustino Oramas),
- "Chanchullo" (Israel "Cachao" Lopez, the father of Cachaito)
- "El Cuarto de Tula" (son/descarga, Sergio Siaba),
- "Guateque Campesino" (Celia Romero "Guateque"),
- "Nuestra Ultima Cita" (Forero Esther)
- "Quizás, Quizás, Quizás" (bolero by Oswaldo Farres).
See also
References
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External links
- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). Buena Vista Social Club at IMDb
- Comprehensive PBS Site about the film
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- Pages with reference errors
- 1999 films
- 1990s documentary films
- German documentary films
- German films
- English-language films
- Films directed by Wim Wenders
- Documentary films about music and musicians
- Documentary films about Cuba
- Buena Vista Social Club
- Films shot in the Netherlands
- Films shot in Cuba
- Spanish-language films
- Artisan Entertainment films
- Film4 Productions films