Times Colonist

MUSIC Cuban fans celebrate Stones’ concert

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HAVANA — Tens of thousands of jubilant Cubans and tourists swarmed the site of the Rolling Stones’ free concert in Havana Friday, calling it a historic moment for a country in which rock fans once had to listen to their favourite music behind closed doors.

Coming two days after Barack Obama finished the first trip to Cuba by a U.S. president in nearly 90 years, the evening concert highlighte­d the communist-run nation’s opening to the world and organizers expected at least 500,000 people to see the biggest act to play in Cuba since its 1959 revolution.

“After today I can die,” said night watchman Joaquin Ortiz. The 62-year-old said he’s been a huge rock fan since he was a teenager in the 1960s, when Cuba’s communist government frowned on U.S. and British bands and he had to hide his Beatles and Stones albums in covers borrowed from albums of appropriat­ely revolution­ary Cuban groups. “This is like my last wish, seeing the Rolling Stones.”

Small groups of people slept overnight outside the Ciudad Deportiva, or Sports City, where a massive stage had been set up for the British rock legends. Tens of thousands more people streamed toward the outdoor sports complex throughout the day.

At least half those waiting outside the concert gates to be the first to get in were foreigners, for whom seeing Cuba was as novel as seeing the Stones is for Cubans.

Ken Smith, a 59-year-old retired sailor, and Paul Herold, a 65-year-old retired plumber, sailed to Havana from Key West, Florida on Herold’s yacht. “This has been one of my life-long dreams, to come to Cuba on my sailboat,” Herold said.

Smith said the concert provided inspiratio­n to come to Cuba after years of thinking about it and he didn’t regret it.

“We’ve just been taken for a ride in a ’57 Pontiac. It doesn’t get any better than that.”

On arrival, lead singer Mick Jagger indirectly referenced the recent changes in Cuba. Obama re-establishe­d diplomatic relations with Cuba last year and called for the two countries to move toward full normalizat­ion in order to end the legacy of the Cold War and prompt Cuba to engage in more reforms of its singlepart­y system and centrally controlled economy.

“Obviously, something has happened in the last few years,” Jagger told reporters at Jose Marti Internatio­nal Airport. “So, time changes everything . . . we are very pleased to be here and I’m sure it’s going to be a great show.”

Cuban musicologi­st Joaquin Borges characteri­zed the event as “very important,” saying it would be the biggest rock concert of its kind ever on the island. He predicted that it would encourage “other groups of that stature to come and perform.”

“It’s a dream that has arrived for the Cuban people,” radio host and rock music specialist Juanito Camacho. “A lot of young Cubans will like the music, but it will also satisfy the longings of older generation­s.”

The band’s private plane carried the four British rockers, fam- ily members and about 60 technical workers to manage the huge amount of gear brought to the island for the concert, including seven huge screens and 1,300 kilograms of sound equipment.

“We have performed in many special places during our long career, but this show in Havana will be a milestone for us, and, we hope, for all our friends in Cuba, too,” the band said in a statement released before their arrival Thursday night.

While they waited hours for the show to begin, fans listened to a loop of songs by popular artists including Amy Winehouse while a lone vendor tried to sell popcorn to members of the crowd.

In the heat of Cuba’s revolution from the 1960s to the 1980s, foreign bands such as The Rolling Stones were considered subversive and blocked from the radio. Rock music such as the Stones’ wasn’t officially prohibited in public, but it was disapprove­d of. Cubans listened to their music in secret, passing records from hand to hand.

The band’s Cuba stop ends its Ole Latin America tour, which also included concerts in Brazil, Uruguay, Chile, Argentina and Mexico.

 ?? DESMOND BOYLAN, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Cuban fans of the Rolling Stones wait for the band to take the stage Friday in Havana.
DESMOND BOYLAN, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Cuban fans of the Rolling Stones wait for the band to take the stage Friday in Havana.

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