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'El Guayabero', Cuban music legend
HAVANA - Cuban musician Faustino Oramas, adored for his saucy ballads and one of the last remaining stars behind the acclaimed Buena Vista Social Club CD, died on Tuesday at the age of 95, Cuban state radio said.
Nicknamed 'El Guayabero' after a town that inspired him to write a
song after he got into trouble there for flirting with a married
woman, Oramas died of liver cancer at his home town of Holguin.
Often called the king of double-entendres, Oramas composed
'Candela' - one of the most rhythmically charged tracks on the 1997
Buena Vista CD.
The project brought together the semi-forgotten masters of Cuban
"son", a rootsy and passionate style of traditional music
considered the backbone of salsa.
Many of its stars have already died - guitarist Compay Segundo
and pianist Ruben Gonzalez in 2003, aged 95 and 84, singer Ibrahim
Ferrer in 2005, age 78, and singer-composer Pio Leyva last year at
age 88.
Oramas first made his name as a troubadour, wandering from town
to town with his guitar and soon became famous for lacing his
lyrics with metaphors and sexual innuendo.
Buena Vista was the name of a seniors-only social club in a
western Havana neighbourhood.
While documents record his birth as in 1911, Oramas was never
sure of his exact age.
Some say he was as old as 103.
He was philosophical about his death, describing life in one of
his later songs as being like an express train running on time as
the rails, and noting the train could never stop or go
backwards.
"Death comes and it doesn't warn you," he said in a recent
interview.
"The day it comes for you, nobody can do anything to stop
it."
Nampa-Reuters
Often called the king of double-entendres, Oramas composed
'Candela' - one of the most rhythmically charged tracks on the 1997
Buena Vista CD.The project brought together the semi-forgotten
masters of Cuban "son", a rootsy and passionate style of
traditional music considered the backbone of salsa.Many of its
stars have already died - guitarist Compay Segundo and pianist
Ruben Gonzalez in 2003, aged 95 and 84, singer Ibrahim Ferrer in
2005, age 78, and singer-composer Pio Leyva last year at age
88.Oramas first made his name as a troubadour, wandering from town
to town with his guitar and soon became famous for lacing his
lyrics with metaphors and sexual innuendo.Buena Vista was the name
of a seniors-only social club in a western Havana
neighbourhood.While documents record his birth as in 1911, Oramas
was never sure of his exact age.Some say he was as old as 103.He
was philosophical about his death, describing life in one of his
later songs as being like an express train running on time as the
rails, and noting the train could never stop or go backwards."Death
comes and it doesn't warn you," he said in a recent interview."The
day it comes for you, nobody can do anything to stop
it."Nampa-Reuters
