Edmonton Journal

Solidarity rocks for Cuban, Alberta bands

- SANDRA SPEROUNES

Nathan Setterlund wasn’t sure what to expect from his first gig in Cuba.

How many people would show up to see his electroroc­k band, Viking Fell, in what was nothing more than a courtyard with a staircase as a makeshift stage? Would his instrument­s, including a midi controller, even work with the venue’s gear and voltage? Si and si.

“To go to a place we’ve never been before and have 100 kids show up ... that was awesome,” says Setterlund. “I still can’t get 100 kids in Edmonton.”

The gig, in the 500-year-old city of Trinidad, kicked off Viking Fell’s two-week trek of Cuba in March. Setterlund and his bandmates were the latest ambassador­s of Solidarity Rock, an Edmonton non-profit organizati­on that promotes closer ties between Canadian and Cuban musicians.

Since 2008, more than six Canadian acts, including Edmonton’s Slates and Montreal’s Sean Foster & The Vaqueros, have toured the Caribbean country and donated guitars, strings, laptops, microphone­s, cables and picks to aspiring musicians. Vancouver engineer Jesse Gander has also recorded an album for Arrabio, a hardcore band from Trinidad.

“When we first started, it wasn’t like it was hard to get a guitar,” says Drew McIntosh, founder of Solidarity Rock.

“There were NO guitars, no strings, no anything. We started to figure out how we can be a part of changing that. We don’t take political positions. We just have fun and let people do what they’re going to do.”

Last year, for the first time, Solidarity Rock was able to bring Arrabio to the U.S. and Western Canada, booking gigs in cities such as New York, Edmonton and Vancouver. “We have had the opportunit­ies to make records, do tours, have internatio­nal promotion so that people can know what’s going on inside the island,” Cuban guitarist William Garcia writes in a Facebook message. “(We can) have a dialogue with a non-Spanish (speaking) crowd and (through) music know that there are no real barriers. Music is one and only one language. Punk rock can make us all feel the same.”

While Cubans no longer need exit visas to leave their country, they still need visas to get into Canada — which is causing a bit of a headache for Garcia and his bandmates. They want to return for a two-week tour but a mixup is wreaking havoc on their plans. The musicians applied for temporary resident visas when they should have applied for work visas, so they might end up missing their first gig on Sunday at Barber Ha, 10011 Whyte Ave.

McIntosh says the show will still go on — with Slates, Viking Fell and Eden Valley hip-hop act Back to the Blanket — to raise money to cover Solidarity Rock’s costs of visa reapplicat­ions and new flights. (Showtime: 6 p.m. Tickets are $12 at the door.)

The members of Arrabio hope to have their paperwork in time for their next shows. They’re scheduled to perform at Calgary’s Sled Island Festival (June 18) and several First Nations communitie­s before playing Sunday, June 29 at The Pawn Shop.

A second Cuban punk band, Adictox, was also caught up in the visa mix-up, but McIntosh says he’ll try to book new shows for them in August. Adictox’s frontman, Pablito (El Pollo) Riveron, says he can’t wait to start his first overseas tour. “For me to have the opportunit­y to play and travel in Canada or another country makes me feel like the first person to walk on the moon!” he writes in a Facebook message.

 ?? SANDRA SPEROUNES/EDMONTON JOURNAL ?? Solidarity Rock founder Drew McIntosh, left, with Nathan Setterlund of Viking Fell, which recently toured Cuba.
SANDRA SPEROUNES/EDMONTON JOURNAL Solidarity Rock founder Drew McIntosh, left, with Nathan Setterlund of Viking Fell, which recently toured Cuba.

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