DISCOGRAPHY
Los Van Van vol. I (1969)
Los Van Van vol. II (1974)
Los Van Van vol. III (1974)
Los Van Van vol. IV (1976)
Los Van Van vol. V (1979)
Los Van Van vol. VI (1980)
Báilalo eh! ah! (1982)
Qué pista (1983)
Anda, ven y muévete (1984)
25 años... y seguimos ahí, vol. I (recopilatorio,
1994)
La Habana sí (1985)
Eso que anda (1986)
La titimanía (1987)
Songo (1988)
El negro no tiene na' (1988)
Rico son (1989)
Aqui... el que baila gana (1990)
Esto está bueno (recopilatorio, 1991)
Bailando mojao (recopilatorio 1993)
Azúcar (1993)
Lo último en vivo (1994)
¡Ay Dios, ampárame! (1996) |
Founded in 1969, this group has marked
the route in dancing music in the island and even beyond its borders
with a diversity of rhythms that stirs the soul and the body of the
listeners. Formell, the director of the orchestra, is also bass player,
arranger, composer, singer, record producer and has been able to maintain
the particular sonority in a propitious background for the existence
of this type of orchestras.
When the first voices of Van Van start its contagious singing,
the audience vibrates. As a part of a spell that nobodies can decipher
in a matter of some seconds, the whole scenario is full of people
not only interested in the performance but in enjoying and dancing,
at the tunes of an excellent dancing music while their bodies are
swinging. Formell started studying music at 14 with his father,
and disregarded his strong vocation he felt for medicine.
Passionate at those family scenes where he was in ecstasy watching
his father, hours after hours before a pentagram while composing,
he made the decision without repentance to practice the mental cure,
instead of that of the body, becoming what is nowadays a great promoter
of happiness.
The guitar has accompanied him during his first steps as a trovador,
when he was completely absorbed by the filín movement developed
in the 40's and 50's when he used to interpret his own boleros or
those of known authors.
He learned to play the double bass with master Orestes Urfé
and attended courses of harmony taught by outstanding musicians
as Félix Guerrero, Somavilla and Tony Taño.
Among the musicians who have influenced him during his career, Formell
usually mentions the Beatles, Elvis Presley, Michel Legrand, the
charangas, the bands and show orchestras while in classic music
he admires Chopin and Tchaikovsky.
Along
with César Pedroso "Puppy" and José Luis
Quintana "Changuito," Formell created the "songo,"
a genre that is danced in the Cuban parties since Van Van orchestra
emerged in the dancing Cuban panorama where everybody seems to perfectly
understand the language of trumpets, percussion and charismatic
voices.
In this regard raises the almost legendary figures of Pedro Calvo
and Mayito. Both singers are loved by the Cuban population for both
the impeccable scenic projection and the empathy established with
the audience.
In
31 years, the musicians of the orchestra has logically been replaced;
nonetheless, the personality of the orchestra has been preserved
and this special feature has made other orchestras and bands raised
them to an honor position, very difficult to attain and impossible
to improve.
Juan Formell stated at the Grammy ceremony that his CD "Llegó
Van Van" (Van Van Has Arrived)-a valuable work for the balance
attained and the variety of genres-that he considers this award
a triumph of the Cuban culture and music in the last forty years.
"For a long time, the only Cuban music known and disseminated
abroad was that of the fifties. With this prize the wealth attained
in the last four decades will be at the reach of a larger audience,"
expressed to the press, completely happy after receiving the trophy.
In
the last production of Van Van, several numbers have been included
that highlighted the career of this orchestra: "Guararey de
Pastora" (Pastora's anger), "El baile del buey cansao"
(The dance of the tired bullock), "La Habana no aguanta más"
(No more exodus to Havana City), "Eso que anda" (This
that is going on), "La titimanía" (The syndrome
of mature men for young girls), "El negro no tiene ná"
(Black man has not much), they are all from Juan Formell, regarded
as truly chronicles of the Cuban daily life, so much inclined to
enjoy dance and music.
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