Beatles

Casa Heidi

Angelita had recommended that I speak to her neighbor, Heidi, because she was in Havana during the era of the Beatles. I knew Heidi already, as two of my friends, Lucy and Eva, had lived with her while we all were studying in Vedado last winter. Lucy has actually been in and out of Havana the past few months, working, and had just arrived the night before. I went over that afternoon and was greeted warmly by both her and Heidi.

Heidi explained that she was very, very young at the time of the Revolution’s success. It was her mother that I needed to talk to. As I caught up with Lucy, Heidi’s mom emerged tentatively from the house with a smile. After giving my little project speech, she effortlessly began giving me details. “I don’t know if the youth today really like the Beatles now,” she began. “They like reggaetón,” I replied. But the Beatles were certainly popular with the youth back then. Unlike the Submarino director, she claims the band was prohibited, but it wasn’t impossible to listen to them. Like the woman at the Institute said, people regularly played Beatles music in their homes, and “No one would knock on your door.” You just couldn’t necessarily enjoy the Beatles on the radio or TV, nor could you buy the records in Cuba. At one point, the government even went on a crusade to burn the records. It didn’t really matter; she enjoyed listening to them whenever. “Trataba copiar la letra,” she said. “I tried to write down the lyrics.” Her mother actually owned a piano and she would try her best to play it while singing the words she could remember. The emotion of the music is what she liked best, her favorite songs being “Anna” and “I Wanna Hold Your Hand.”

Like the woman at the Institute, she also talked about the role of the Beatles on her quinceañera. She explained that when a girl turns 15, she has a big party in which she dances to various songs of typical Cuban style with her father. While she did dance to some traditional songs, she eventually danced to the Beatles. Somewhat a “rebelde,” she also liked wearing her hair with a Beatles bowl cut. Still, she professed that she was not nearly as influenced by the Beatles as the older kids at that time. “I was an adolescent, 11 or 12 years old [during the rise of the Beatles]. Those who really enjoyed them were several years older.” Nonetheless, she seemed to have appreciated the Beatles just the same.

Fun fact: Heidi secretly has WiFi in her house (internet connection is largely controlled by the government), and its name is “Ringo.”

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La Habana Vieja y Otros

December 27, 2017

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