Ruben Blades quotes:

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  • I was the first person to come into New York with a Latin American point of view which was also very much influenced by political happenings in Latin America.

  • I was born in Panama, the Republic of Panama, on July 16, 1948 in Panama City, in an area called San Felipe.

  • What is interesting in this is the exchange of music that occurred between New Orleans and Cuba, I mean, they had ferries that would go from one port to another.

  • So that I saw music as a way of documenting realities from the urban cities of Latin America.

  • What I do not accept is the fact that so many people's talents were ripped off.

  • So that when I came from Panama... my family was exiled in 1973 and they went to Miami.

  • And, he'd seen me in Panama, and he talked about maybe doing something in New York so I hooked it up when I came here and I recorded in 1969 my first album with Pete Rodriguez.

  • There was a lot of stuff happening in Havana that was being heard and appreciated by New Orleans musicians because of this situation. And vice versa.

  • They're making a ton of money, and no one is getting a nickel.

  • The grandmother, the mother, the worker, the student, the intellectual, the professional, the unemployed, everybody identified with the songs because they were descriptions of life in the city.

  • In those days the big U.S. labels didn't have any particular interest in the Latin market.

  • Everyone comes back. It makes no difference how far we wander, we always have our country, our land, in our souls and our minds.

  • So that when I came to New York again, it was, I'm not too sure right now, but it was '74 or '75. I went to Miami in '74 and then I came to New York, I think, at the end of '74.

  • And music was a very important part of our lives. The radio was on all day.

  • Every band had their own distinctive sound, but it was pretty much dancing music and rhythmic music with a tremendous emphasis on copying the Cuban models.

  • I was a kid, and I remember my mother singing. She was also a radio soap opera actress, but my mother sang.

  • I think we risk becoming the best informed society that has ever died of ignorance.

  • I think in New York we had respect and we would pretty much fill up the places where we went, but I never got the sense that we really were Number 1 here in New York among the Latin crowds.

  • So I went to Miami in '74 with my family and while I was there it became obvious that we needed money and we needed to do something, because my family, we left without anything really, and we didn't have any money to begin with.

  • Rock is young music, it is youth oriented. It just speaks for a generation.

  • So everything that ever happened, we knew about in Panama.

  • Anywhere you had a commerce center, you had a lot of music.

  • I didn't do drugs, I never did do drugs. Never. I don't have any story of drugs, you know, to speak of. Never did drugs, never was interested in drugs and then I wasn't interested in the people around the drugs.

  • People are a lot smarter than anyone gives them credit for being.

  • A lot of times you're just conditioned by what's around you.

  • I decided we should book ourselves, so I started booking the band.

  • So that in 1974, when I graduated as a lawyer, I figured I'm not going to be a lawyer under a military regime.

  • But, when I was about thirteen, I began to sort of sing in my neighborhood.

  • It doesn't make sense for me to be a lawyer in a place where there is no law.

  • There was no television, so the radio provided you with everything.

  • We had something to say. Whenever we played, people didn't dance, they listened.

  • Yes, I was going to law school and it was closed in '69.

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