Celia de la Caridad Cruz
Alonso, 21 October
1924, Santa Suarez
district, Havana,
Cuba. Described
as the "Queen
of Salsa" - just
one of her several
superlative epithets.
Cruz is the most influential
female in the
history of Afro-Cuban
music. Her family and neighbours
became aware of
the young. Celia's
singing ability
from listening
to her croon lullabies
to her younger
relatives. While
she was training
to become a literature
teacher, an older
cousin entered
her in a competition
on the talent
show La Hora Del
Té on Radio García
Serrá, in which
she won first
prize. Her 1983
biography refers
to 1947 as the
year when this
contest occurred,
but the sleeve
notes to two of
her
early albums, Canta Celia Cruz (Celia Cruz Sings)
and Cuba's Queen
Of Rhythm, mention
1935.
Celia's father, Simón Cruz, viewed music a dishonourable
career for a
woman, but he
was overridden
by his wife,
Catalina Alfonso.
Professional
radio work followed.
Celia concluded
her teacher
training and
did some classes
at Havana's
National Conservatory
of Music.She
eventually switched
to singing full-time
when a trusted
teacher advised
her that she
would be foolish
to do otherwise.
Cruz first appeared on Santero, an album of Afro-Cuban
cult music on
the Panart label.
(Two of her later bestselling albums on Seeco, Homenaje A Los
Santos and Homenaje
A Los Santos
Vol. 2, contained
recordings of
sacred songs,
and her association
with Santeria
or Yoruba
has been highlighted in UK media coverage though she claims
to be a practising
Roman Catholic).
In addition to radio, Cruz worked with the group Gloria Matancera
and in small
theatres and
cabaret. She
befriended Roderico
"Rodney" Neyra,
later choreographer
at the famous
Tropicana nightclub
in Havana, who
helped her get
work there as
a singer during
the club's winter
seasons. She
toured Mexico
and Venezuela
with him and
his dance troupe,
Las Mulatas
De Fuego (The
Fiery Mulattas).
Neyra introduced
Cruz to Rogelio
Martínez, the
director of
the popular
band Sonora
Matancera.
On 3 August 1950, Cruz replaced Myrta Silva, who had returned
to her native
Puerto Rico,
as lead vocalist
of Sonora Matancera
on their weekly
show on Radio
Progreso. Cruz
made her recording
debut with Sonora
Matancera on
a 78 rpm single
released in
January 1951
entitled "Cao
Cao Mani Picao"
(later included
on Canciones
Premiadas De
Celia Cruz,
her biggest
hit album on
Seeco), with
the flip-side
"Mata Siguaraya"
(later contained
on Homenaje
A Los Santos
Vol. 2). She
made a long
list of records
during her 15-year
tenure with
the band. During
the 50's, Cruz
and the band
appeared on
television,
topped the bill
at the Tropicana
and toured the
Caribbean, South
and Central
America and
the USA.
She made her first appearance in New York at
the old St.
Nicholas Arena
in 1957. Cruz
and Sonora Matancera
left post-revolutionary
Cuba permanently
in July 1960.
"We gave them
the impression
we were just
going on another
temporary tour
abroad. That's
how we got out"
(quoted in her
1983 biography).
They worked
in Mexico for
one-and-a-half
years, during
which time they
made their fifth
Mexican movie
appearance.
"Castro never
forgave me",
she said in
a 1987 interview.
The Cuban government
refused her
permission to
return home
to attend her
father's funeral.
A lengthy commitment
at the Hollywood
Palladium, Los
Angeles, in
1961 enabled
Celia and Sonora
Matancera to
apply for US
residency. In
July 1962 she
was able to
dispense with
her chaperone
(a female relative),
when she married
the band's first
trumpeter, Pedro
Knight, who
became her manager
and on-stage
musical director.
After finishing with Sonora Matancera
in 1965, Cruz switched to Tico Records - then
a division of
Morris Levy's
Roulette Records
- and released
a series of
12 albums (excluding
compilations)
between 1966
and 1972, including
seven in partnership
with Tito Puente
and four recorded
in Mexico with
the band of
Memo Salamanca
(issued by Tico
in the USA under
license from
the Mexican
Orfeon label).
A combination
of poor promotion
and a young
Latino audience
more interested
in other music
styles than
music from the
old country,
meant that her
Tico releases
clocked up poor
sales. However,
by the early
70's, young
Latinos "in
New York, New
Jersey and Miami
began to take
a new pride
in their roots,
and salsa became
the musical
symbol of that
rediscovered
identity" (quote
from Elizabeth
Llorente, 1987).
Jerry Masucci,
who co-ran the
successful salsa
labels, Fania
and Vaya, with
bandleader Johnny
Pacheco, had
his eye on the
Tico catalogue
and was especially
interested in
developing Cruz's
talents. He
struck a deal
with Levy, and
Tico became
part of the
Fania fold.
Cruz was touring
in Mexico in
1973 when it
was decided
that she would
sing the part
of Gracia Divina
on Larry Harlow's
Latin opera
album Hommy
on Fania, a
version of the
Who's Tommy.
Cruz's outstanding
performance
at the all-star
Carnegie Hall
presentation
of Hommy on
March 29th,
1973 served
to re-launch
her career and
connect her
with a new,
younger audience.
Her new-found
popularity was
consolidated
the following
year. The summer
of 1974 saw
the release
of Celia &
Johnny, the
first of a series
of six successful
collaborations
with Pacheco
on Vaya, which
went gold. Masucci
thought of alternating
Cruz with other
top leaders
on his roster,
like Willie
Colón, Papo
Lucca and Ray
Barretto, whose
bands each had
their own trademark
sound. Cruz
made her album
debut with the
Fania All Stars
in 1975 on the
two-volume Live
At Yankee Stadium.
Bobby Valentín's
re-arrangement
of her 60s track
"Bemba Colora"
("Red Lips",
originally from
Son Con Guaguanco
produced by
Al Santiago)
on volume two
was a show stopper
with the hypnotized
audience chanting
the single word
chorus "colora"
and calling
Cruz back for
an encore.
Film footage of this performance was featured
in Masucci's
movie Salsa.
She continues
to use Valentín's
chart of "Bemba
Colora" to close
her live shows.
Cruz toured
Africa and Europe
with Fania All
Stars and recorded
with them up
until 1988.
After a gap
of about 17
years, Cruz
reunited on
record with
Sonora Matancera
on 1982's Feliz
Encuentro. She
was the subject
of BBC television's
Arena film profile
My Name Is Celia
Cruz broadcast
in 1988, a year
after she was
awarded a star
on the Hollywood
Walk Of Fame.
Later that year,
a programme
in the BBC's
Rhythms Of The
World series
was devoted
to concert footage
of Cruz teamed
up with Puente's
big band (with
special guest
Pacheco) recorded
at the Apollo
theatre, New
York in 1987.
She joined a
reunion of 13
former lead
singers of Sonora
Matancera for
a series of
three concerts
by the band
in June 1989
in celebration
of their 65th
anniversary
and was commemorated
by a double
album release.
In 1989 Cruz
was awarded
an honorary
doctorate of
music by Yale
University.
Her second collaboration
with Ray Barretto,
1988's Ritmo
En El Corazón,
won a Grammy
Award in 1990.
In 1992, Celia
appeared in the Hollywood movie The Mambo Kings
as nightclub
owner Evalina
Montoya, and
three years
later played
a cameo role
in The Perez
Family. Cruz
signed to the
RMM label in
1989, and the
following year
licensed her
product for
release in Spain
on the newly
formed BAT label.
Azucar Negra
gave Cruz her
first gold record
on the Spanish
charts, and
she spent the
rest of the
90s establishing
her presence
in an important
market. During
a decade which
saw the assimilation
of Latin music
into the US
mainstream,
Cruz was garlanded
with several
important titles,
not least of
which was 1995's
Billboard Lifetime
Achievement
Award. At the
end of the decade
she signed to
Sony, debuting
for the label
in 2000 with
Siempre Viviré.