Former Led Zeppelin Guitarist Jimmy Page Visits Cuba

British musician Jimmy Page, former guitarist for the legendary rock band Led Zeppelin, made a surprise visit of several days to Cuba, it was confirmed here Tuesday.

Prensa Latina learned that the 67-year-old rocker left Cuba on Monday after a visit that included tours of historic sites, and purchases of souvenirs such as the famous photograph of Che Guevara taken by Alberto Korda and albums by local artists.

Documentary Summer School in Cuba 27 June – 22 July 2011

The Department of Spanish and Latin American Studies at University College London, in association with the Escuela International de Cine y Television in Cuba and Ryerson University, Toronto, Canada, is pleased to offer an intensive, hands-on Documentary Summer School in Cuba next summer, running from Monday 27 June until Friday 22 July 2011. The workshop will be held at the world-famous Escuela Internacional de Cine y Television which is situated just 30 miles outside Havana in San Antonio de los Baños. Founded in 1986 by Gabriel García Marquez, the International Film and Television School — known as a 'Vatican for Film-Makers' — is now directed by Tanya Valette, one of the first generation of graduates from the school in 1990.

The course will be taught by one of the School's regular professors, Enrique Colina, who has been making innovative documentaries and films for over twenty years, gaining many international awards for his work. He is also well known in Cuba as the host of an enormously popular TV show about cinema of the 1970s and 1980s called "24 x Segundo" (24 Times a Second). One of his recent films, Entre ciclones (Between Cyclones, 2003), was shown to great acclaim at the Cannes Film Festival. Professor Stephen Hart of the Department of Spanish and Latin American Studies at UCL, is the co-ordinator and co-instructor of the course and he will be travelling with the group from London to the Film School.

Review of CD Creole Choir of Cuba: Tande-La

One of the most enjoyable – and surprising- hits of the last couple of years in the UK was the success of this phenomenal choir, whose repertoire consists of traditional Haitian songs sung in a style suggesting that they hail from the island of Haiti itself. And yet they are all Cuban, from the city of Camaguey, which does not even boast a ‘tumba francesa', the old cultural centres for the Haitian descendents which still survive in Santiago and Guantanamo.
Indeed, much of the music on this recently released album does not sound ‘typically Cuban' at all- it is often intense and full of passion, with soulful solo singing set against a pulsating and rhythmic chorus and typical Haitian drums.

Ballet set to break out as 2011's most exciting art form

When Carlos Acosta and Tamara Rojo run onto the stage of the O2 arena in June next year, the Royal Ballet's greatest stars will be following in the footsteps of Gary Barlow, Roger Federer and, last week, Arcade Fire's Régine Chassagne. Dancing Romeo and Juliet, they will be greeted by more than 13,000 fans and will be playing their part in a ballet boom that looks set to sweep Britain in 2011.

Days of film, fiesta and intelligence in Havana

Alfredo Guevara, president of the International Festival of New Latin American Cinema has announced that no less than 515 full- and medium-feature films, documentaries and animations are to be screened in Havana from December 2 through 12, and "although quantity is not always synonymous with quality, it speaks volumes for the diversity that we are seeking and which is dependent on every country’s annual production, not on the Festival."

Review of AfroCubism CD

AfroCubism
Womad festival legend has it that the most exiting music was always played backstage as the various musicians met over a drink and shared their ideas and styles with each other. This album takes this idea to its extreme in that World Circuit has finally united some of the greatest musicians in the world for a session exploring the best of both traditions.