© Latinas in History 2008 |
CRUZ,
CELIA (19242003)
Legendary
figure in Afro-Cuban music, salsa music, and Latin music internationally, epithets
such as the Queen of Salsa, la Guarachera de Oriente, and la Reina Rumba reflect
the central role that Celia Cruz played as an iconic representative of Latin music.
A talented vocalist and sonera (improviser), Cruz career spanned over fifty
years. From humble beginnings in her native Cuba, Cruz used her singing talent
to support her family. Her first break came as lead singer for a touring dance
group, Las Mulatas de Fuego, but it would be the orchestra la Sonora Matancera
that helped Cruz become the embodiment of Afro-Cuban music. Along with members
of this group, Cruz exiled into the U.S. and in 1962 married Pedro Knight in New
York initiating the most important phase of her career and of the Latin music
industry in the city. Cruz donation of a traditional Cuban rumba dress,
a blonde wig, and a pair of her stage shoes to the National Museum of American
History at the Smithsonian attest to her contributions to the Latin music world,
now an official part of U.S. history. She served as a role model for women salsa
singers, such as La India and Albita. She was not only a female pioneer in a male-dominated
musical industry, but also a legend by virtue of her powerful voice, talent, vitality,
and charisma.
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