Zürcher Nachrichten - K-pop seduces youth in communist Cuba, birthplace of salsa

EUR -
AED 4.335689
AFN 77.907472
ALL 96.499843
AMD 446.503942
ANG 2.113037
AOA 1082.44004
ARS 1708.938394
AUD 1.687138
AWG 2.127698
AZN 2.001594
BAM 1.953764
BBD 2.376254
BDT 144.169755
BGN 1.982353
BHD 0.444977
BIF 3482.171097
BMD 1.180415
BND 1.500936
BOB 8.152538
BRL 6.188101
BSD 1.179785
BTN 106.771187
BWP 15.536874
BYN 3.369089
BYR 23136.130958
BZD 2.372797
CAD 1.613249
CDF 2596.912637
CHF 0.917325
CLF 0.025678
CLP 1013.929255
CNY 8.189951
CNH 8.194593
COP 4285.00032
CRC 584.870665
CUC 1.180415
CUP 31.280993
CVE 110.145548
CZK 24.380403
DJF 209.78337
DKK 7.467098
DOP 74.013182
DZD 153.13546
EGP 55.354732
ERN 17.706223
ETB 182.783688
FJD 2.602402
FKP 0.861604
GBP 0.864577
GEL 3.18123
GGP 0.861604
GHS 12.954554
GIP 0.861604
GMD 86.170109
GNF 10353.771376
GTQ 9.049263
GYD 246.833811
HKD 9.221933
HNL 31.170648
HRK 7.537537
HTG 154.639499
HUF 379.775157
IDR 19830.143102
ILS 3.653154
IMP 0.861604
INR 106.745328
IQD 1545.595823
IRR 49724.975522
ISK 144.80106
JEP 0.861604
JMD 185.007197
JOD 0.836967
JPY 185.227751
KES 152.214672
KGS 103.227395
KHR 4762.05745
KMF 493.41333
KPW 1062.308599
KRW 1723.547409
KWD 0.362789
KYD 0.98318
KZT 586.097419
LAK 25377.660469
LBP 105652.243299
LKR 365.147093
LRD 219.441312
LSL 18.855012
LTL 3.485458
LVL 0.714021
LYD 7.455914
MAD 10.815762
MDL 19.962281
MGA 5226.575326
MKD 61.648648
MMK 2478.795775
MNT 4213.900016
MOP 9.494246
MRU 46.847591
MUR 54.157713
MVR 18.237541
MWK 2045.413175
MXN 20.44887
MYR 4.641383
MZN 75.251613
NAD 18.85573
NGN 1615.468857
NIO 43.415123
NOK 11.412835
NPR 170.864659
NZD 1.966199
OMR 0.453867
PAB 1.179776
PEN 3.966067
PGK 5.054561
PHP 69.581927
PKR 329.981132
PLN 4.217743
PYG 7808.597758
QAR 4.30317
RON 5.094436
RSD 117.379271
RUB 90.004751
RWF 1721.912823
SAR 4.426687
SBD 9.511903
SCR 16.188746
SDG 710.016027
SEK 10.60626
SGD 1.502485
SHP 0.885617
SLE 28.890652
SLL 24752.708222
SOS 673.101387
SRD 44.730677
STD 24432.204039
STN 24.474805
SVC 10.322805
SYP 13054.886383
SZL 18.854431
THB 37.442843
TJS 11.025357
TMT 4.143256
TND 3.412228
TOP 2.842155
TRY 51.3705
TTD 7.991874
TWD 37.367804
TZS 3045.812667
UAH 50.895254
UGX 4200.622372
USD 1.180415
UYU 45.470687
UZS 14462.438063
VES 438.69004
VND 30669.538497
VUV 141.126608
WST 3.218011
XAF 655.276887
XAG 0.013483
XAU 0.000239
XCD 3.19013
XCG 2.126293
XDR 0.813873
XOF 655.290751
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.381387
ZAR 18.966079
ZMK 10625.152197
ZMW 23.09503
ZWL 380.093098
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    -0.1400

    23.52

    -0.6%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3200

    16.68

    -1.92%

  • NGG

    1.5600

    87.79

    +1.78%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    23.87

    -0.29%

  • GSK

    3.8900

    57.23

    +6.8%

  • AZN

    3.1300

    187.45

    +1.67%

  • VOD

    0.4600

    15.71

    +2.93%

  • RIO

    0.1100

    96.48

    +0.11%

  • BCE

    0.2400

    26.34

    +0.91%

  • BCC

    5.3000

    90.23

    +5.87%

  • RELX

    -0.7300

    29.78

    -2.45%

  • BP

    0.3800

    39.2

    +0.97%

  • BTI

    -0.2400

    61.63

    -0.39%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    13.15

    +0.23%

K-pop seduces youth in communist Cuba, birthplace of salsa
K-pop seduces youth in communist Cuba, birthplace of salsa / Photo: YAMIL LAGE - AFP

K-pop seduces youth in communist Cuba, birthplace of salsa

In Cuba, the home of salsa, young people are being seduced by a music phenomenon from a place that could hardly be more geographically -- or ideologically -- remote.

Text size:

K-pop, the South Korean sensation that has already swept over much of the rest of the world, has made it to the shores of a communist isle that once banned the music of the Beatles.

"I am myself (with) K-pop. I can free myself," said afficionado Mikel Caballero, a 17-year-old who like many of his peers, spends hours each week perfecting the carefully choreographed paces of South Korean sensations like BTS and Blackpink.

Since Cubans gained access to the mobile internet just five years ago, much has changed in a nation where the one-party state nevertheless retains a firm grip on many aspects of life.

There are ride and food-delivery apps, social media, and access to some entertainment sites such as YouTube.

Some Cubans now celebrate Halloween, one of the most quintessential festivals of the United States -- which has held sanctions against Caribbean nation for more than six decades.

- 'I like everything' -

Caballero's friend Samyla Trujillo has been a K-pop devotee for the last four of her 14 years on Earth.

"When I saw BTS... I told myself: 'I want to dance like them," Trujillo told AFP, her hair dyed bright red in homage to the fashion of her idols.

"And then, when they showed me Blackpink, I thought: 'Ooh, they're girls, I want to be like them!"

She has posters and T-shirts plastered with K-pop artists' faces, and watches K-dramas with subtitles.

In the house she shares with her grandmother in the capital Havana, Trujillo regularly transforms the lounge into a dance floor for her and Caballero to practice the steps for their K-pop routines.

It is serious business: one day, Trujillo -- who was in a traditional Caribbean dance troupe as a child -- hopes to become Cuba's first home-grown K-pop idol.

For Trujillo and Caballero both the dream is to go to Seoul one day. "I like everything from there," the 17-year-old told AFP with bright eyes.

Cuba has diplomatic ties with fellow-communist nation North Korea, but not with its democratic neighbor to the south.

- 'Completely new' -

Alejandro Achin, 21, said K-pop "is a completely new experience" for Cubans, who are "used to always the same rhythm, the same routine" of salsa and Reggaeton.

In 2019, Achin realized a personal dream of performing in Seoul after winning an amateur K-pop competition with his group in Havana.

For Hohyun Joung, who teaches at a South Korean cultural and language center which opened its doors in the Cuban capital last year, K-pop has a universal appeal that transcends politics.

"In Korean songs... most of them express the concerns of young people, what they think, their concern about the future," the South Korean national told AFP.

The center where she teaches with four Cubans has 150 students and not enough space to admit more as the appetite for everything South Korean just keeps growing.

Student Ia Gonzalez, 20, has been learning Korean at the center for several months and gets excited every time she recognizes a word in some of her favorite K-pop songs.

"Korean is not difficult. There are difficult parts, but when you really love what you're doing, you invest impetus and passion and you can learn," she told AFP.

X.Blaser--NZN