HAVANA, Cuba — In the country of salsa and rumba, a troupe
of sneaker-wearing Cuban youngsters have burst onto the dance scene with a
style until recently all but unheard of on the isolated island nation: hip hop.
اضافة اعلان
Under US sanctions and with the Communist Party in charge of
all aspects of daily life, including what people get to see on public
television, Cubans have had little exposure to the American genre that has
taken the rest of the world by storm.
But this changed suddenly with internet arriving in the
one-party state in 2015 — and mobile internet since 2018 — with some 4.2
million of Cuba’s 11.2 million people now connected.
With no other platform on which to ply their trade,
16-member Cuban dance troupe Datway (a play on That Way) have taken to Facebook
and Instagram to display their unique brand of hip hop moves, blended with more
traditional, home-grown styles.
It has launched them to international fame, even catching
the eye of
Daddy Yankee, dubbed the King of Reggaeton — a Latin American music
style that borrows heavily from hip hop and rap.
The Puerto Rican rapper, who co-starred on the hit single
“Despacito,” took to Instagram to comment: “Too good #Cuba” about a dance
number the troupe performed to his latest hit “El Pony” and posted online.
In the video, the troupe jumps and gyrates to the reggaeton
rhythm in sports clothes and sneakers, dyed hair and bandannas, and watched by
a ragtag of neighborhood kids in a poor district of central Havana.
The video has earned them 2.2 million views.
“Hip hop videos from other countries are always (set) in
these very beautiful places,” Datway founder Dariel Lopez, aka Chaiky Dari,
told AFP.
Much talent, little exposure
“We always look for places that are... well not ugly,
because for us they are not ugly, but real — those balconies in need of a touch
of paint, young people and children who are not very well dressed,” said the
23-year-old with his wild mop of hair, parts of it bleached blonde.
Chaiky Dari boasts 33,700 subscribers on Instagram, a high
hit rate for a country with the third lowest fixed broadband speed,
according to Speedtest, though it ranks 88th out of 134 for mobile speed.
Under a tin roof held up by walls covered in graffiti, the
members of Datway train from Monday to Friday, shooting their videos on
weekends.
The troupe of 18- to 32-year-olds have backgrounds in
contemporary and folk dance, some even worked in circuses.
Sometimes they go out on the street, plugging in their sound
system at the house of a neighbor — an old lady who sells fruit from her front
steps.
“Abroad, Cuba is still seen as the country of salsa,” but
“here there is also a lot of talent in hip-hop, with a lot of dancers from the
street,” said Liuven Dopico, 28, who himself learned to dance “in the street”
and “by watching a lot of videos.”
Datway’s idea, however, is not to abandon their Cuban dance
roots.
“We often mix hip hop with traditional
Cuban music, we mix
it all and we create something truly beautiful,” said Dopico, his hair tinted
turquoise.
“If it is a salsa we mix it with urban dance, if it is
reggaeton, we add salsa steps to it,” added Dari.
‘The best!’
Fellow troupe member Paloma Duarte, 23, started off as a
classical ballet dancer, then worked in a folk dance company.
Now, “I feel complete as a dancer, I have all the styles!”
she told AFP.
Duarte said the group receives frequent messages from
amateur dancers, many of whom send in videos, as the hip hop phenomenon
spreads.
But to encourage more youngsters, “it would be really good
if at the level of the state, of television, there was some urban dance and not
only salsa and rumba,” she added.
In recent weeks, the glowing comments of Latin stars such as
Daddy Yankee and Ricky Martin (“The best!”, he wrote on Instagram), have
propelled Datway to new heights.
He even signing a contract with a record company in Florida
to appear in dance videos.
And when Puerto Rican-Cuban Reggaeton duo Ozuna and Ovi
launched an online challenge, inviting dancers to choreograph a video for their
new song “Envidioso,” the winners were none other than Datway.
The group received a prize of $10,000 — a fortune in a country
where the minimum monthly salary is $87. Half of the money will be used on
“technology” — better internet connection and filming equipment, said Ernesto
Rodriguez, 32, the group’s technical director.
“The rest was divided among the members, and I also gave
money to the children” from the neighborhood, who appear in Datway’s videos.
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