El lleva y trae celia cruz biography
Celia Cruz b. Growing up in Havana, Cuba, Cruz received accolades all through her teenage years for her abilities as a singer. In the last years of the s, Cruz sang solo and with Las Mulatas de Fuego in radio stations, theaters, and cabarets, both within Cuba and abroad as part of the popular music circuit. In , Cruz made her first recording abroad in Venezuela and joined the conjunto Sonora Matancera soon after.
During the s, this musical affiliation provided her with a solid platform to continue her artistic transformation. Over the course of her artistic path, Cruz—an Afro-Cuban woman who embraced and promoted Latinidad —constantly reinvented herself and adapted to new realities without losing sight of her artistic vision. She contributed to shaping Latino and Latin American popular music and culture since her early days, and her life and career were marked by a multiplicity of experiences, interests, and subjectivities.
Biography, as a genre, portrays not only the story of biographical individuals, but also the historical and cultural nuances that shaped their decisions and actions. Neither of these narratives should be seen as devoted only to scholars or specialized groups, but also as providing an overview of interdisciplinary themes correlated to Cruz. In Cruz and Reymundo , the singer recounted her life in the first person and as a prominent artist.
Cruz, Celia, and Ana Cristina Reymundo. Celia, My Life: An Autobiography.
Celia Cruz (born Úrsula Hilaria Celia de la Caridad Cruz Alfonso, 21 October - 16 July ) was a Havana, Cuba born salsa singer.
New York: Harper Collins, From her early years in Cuba to her last years in the United States, the singer tells her own story in six chapters. The Celia Cruz Biography. New York: Reed Press,