Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Music legend Willy Chirino and HistoryMia­mi Museum take a look back at his 5-decade career

- By Fernando Gonzalez ArtburstMi­ami.com

In the pop music business, a lifetime is measured in weeks and months. That’s how long it takes for trends to fade, styles to fall out of fashion, and stars to be made and discarded as the next one is ready to sell a product. A 50-year music career is unimaginab­le.

But there always has been more than pop hits to Cuban-born singer, songwriter and producer Willy Chirino.

There is his refugee-kidto-pop-star trajectory and his role in the developmen­t of the “Miami sound,” a musical mirror to a city that was growing while speaking in many languages and accents. Then there is Chirino’s bold human rights activism regarding Cuba. And there are the songs, of course, including some, such as “Nuestro día (Ya viene llegando)” (“Our Day is Coming”), that became anthems for many Cubans, both in the island and in exile.

It’s a story that’s being celebrated at HistoryMia­mi Museum’s “Willy Chirino: 50 Years of Music,” on display Wednesdays to Sundays through Sept. 10.

The exhibition features memorabili­a such as his Grammy and Latin Grammy awards, clothing worn at significan­t events, and his first guitar after arriving in the United States. There also are pieces such as the original handwritte­n lyrics to his hits, “Soy” (1974) and “Nuestro día” (1991), and a torn Cuban flag with his name on it, found on an empty raft by the Coast Guard in the Florida Straits in the early 1990s.

For Chirino, 75, the exhibit is a chance “for people to get a better idea of where I come from, who I am, and what I have done to survive 50 years in the music business, which is not easy,” he says during an in-person interview. “To still be making music is awesome.”

He has released a new album “Sigo Pa’lante” (“I Keep Going Forward”) — his first studio recording of new music since “Pa’lante” in 2008.

“And that’s what it’s all about — [to] keep moving,” he says.

Also, as part of this year of celebratio­ns, Chirino is headlining a concert at the James L. Knight Center, 400 SE Second Ave., Miami, on Saturday, March 11. The event, which he notes will feature “a lot of big friends of mine,” will review his long career and highlight the new album.

Telling Chirino’s life and career was a natural fit for the museum’s mission, says Natalia Crujeiras, chief executive officer and executive director of HistoryMia­mi Museum.

“For 82 years, HistoryMia­mi has been the steward in collecting artifacts, objects, audio, oral history stories, everything that tells the story of Miami — and Willy Chirino’s story is a Miami story,” Crujeiras says. “It is, perhaps, the ultimate Miami story.”

Born Wilfredo Jose Chirino Rodriguez in Consolació­n del Sur, he arrived in Miami in August 1961 as part of Operation Pedro Pan, an exodus of young people following the revolution in Cuba. He was 14 years old. Like many who left the island nation then, Chirino thought he would return home in a matter of weeks.

“Oh yes, that was me when I left, which made the process a little bit less painful,” he says. “When I said goodbye to my friends, I wasn’t very emotional because, in my mind, how could a declared communist government survive 90 miles away from the United States? So, I’ll be gone maybe three months, six months at the most, I’ll learn a little English and be back. Little did we know.”

There have been many hits and gold records since those days, but Cuba and the political situation never seem far from his mind. As he sees it, with success came other responsibi­lities, and Chirino embraces his role as an activist artist. He recalls writing “Nuestro día (Ya viene llegando)” as a way “to help me heal myself. To have the world listen to your experience­s

... share your pain and who you are. It tends to be a process of self-healing.”

The song was too long for

radio and positioned last in the album, but it touched a nerve inside Cuba, where his music was then banned, and among exiles.

“That song is a mystery to me,” he says quietly, as if thinking out loud. “When I wrote it, I wasn’t expecting anything of it, and neither did the record company.

It’s a song that talks about my own experience­s and, in the end, has a message of hope to the Cuban people.”

“I am Cuban, we have a very sad situation, and I have a megaphone,” he says. “For 64 years, my country has been under the rule of a very oppressive government that nobody elected. People in Cuba are desperate. So it’s my responsibi­lity as an artist, as a Cuban who knows the pain of my people, to be their voice because they have no voice. I have to speak about that.”

But Chirino also calls himself “a proud Miamian.” He grew up in Miami, and some experience­s remain fresh in his memory. A serious Beatles fan, Chirino still becomes animated talking about witnessing the band’s arrival in Miami in 1964.

“My friends and I decided to go to the airport, and I remember moving without moving my feet,” he says, letting out a chuckle. “The crowd was lifting me as it moved. It was an unbelievab­le experience.”

It is clearly a thrill for him recalling that, years later, he performed at the Napoleon Ballroom, at the recently demolished Deauville Hotel, in Miami Beach, on the same stage where The Beatles played for their second appearance on “The Ed Sullivan Show.”

He also grew up with Miami. Along with fellow Cuban exile Carlos Oliva, he was instrument­al in developing the “Miami sound,” a novel blend of Cuban music, rock, pop, jazz and R&B that spoke to the rhythms of a growing city.

“I loved Celia Cruz, Beny Moré, Conjunto Casino, bands that were very important in Cuba when I left. But when I got here, I was listening to The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and The Beach Boys. I loved Motown. I had to put them together because I loved them all.”

There was nothing calculated about it. To Oliva and Chirino, fusion came naturally, he says. “But in those times, fusions were not popular because record companies and radio stations ... didn’t know what to do with them. They’d say, ‘It’s not salsa, it’s not bolero, it’s not a ballad, it’s not rock ... so our music had no place to go. We had a tough time in the beginning.”

For Chirino, that story is just one of the many involving Cuban exiles shaping Miami as we now know it.

“It’s a beautiful thing to know that Miami is Miami because of so many Cubans that came in that era,” he says. Those exiles had nothing, he underlines, but “they had the knowledge of how to be successful — and they started building Miami, and Miami has turned so big and so incredible from those early years of Cuban exile.”

He pauses to reflect on his career and the exhibit. “It’s been a roller-coaster experience. And after so many years and having seen everything that I’ve seen, I’m honored and happy to share it.”

IF YOU GO

What: “Willy Chirino: 50 Years of Music”

When: Wednesdays­Sundays, through Sept. 10 Where: HistoryMia­mi Museum, 101 W. Flagler St., Miami

Cost: Regular museum admission is $10 ($8 for seniors, $5 for children age 6-12, and free for those younger than 6). However, the museum is offering free admission during the month of February in honor of Black History Month, according to the website.

Informatio­n: 305-375-1492; HistoryMia­mi.org

ArtburstMi­ami.com is a nonprofit source of dance, visual arts, music and performing arts news.*

 ?? ?? Willy Chirino with his first band, The Whalers, in 1964.
Willy Chirino with his first band, The Whalers, in 1964.
 ?? ZARABANDA PRODUCTION­S PHOTOS ?? Music icon Willy Chirino performs in 1994 at an outdoor concert in Panama for Cuban detainees. Chirino’s five decades in music are at the center of an exhibition at HistoryMia­mi Museum through September.
ZARABANDA PRODUCTION­S PHOTOS Music icon Willy Chirino performs in 1994 at an outdoor concert in Panama for Cuban detainees. Chirino’s five decades in music are at the center of an exhibition at HistoryMia­mi Museum through September.

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