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Cuban band battles censorship

Posted: Friday, October 05, 2007 12:59 PM
Filed Under:

A top Cuban rock band – "Moneda Dura" – is in trouble with government censors. Someone decided their newest song is too controversial. Presumably it’s been perceived as too unfavorable to the Cuban government – so it’s been banned on all state-run airwaves.

But, the songwriter feels his work is misunderstood. "We did something important, that mattered to the people who listen," said Nassiry Lugo, the band leader.

VIDEO: Cuba censors hit song

The song is entitled "Mala Leche" – Cuban slang for "evil intentions." It’s the title track on their latest CD, released this summer on the island’s Egrem label.

Despite the official ban – or maybe helped by it – Mala Leche is gaining fame.

Local fans are downloading the contraband from YouTube – and then, sending it straight to the Cuban underground.

Proof that in today’s high-tech world, censorship is no match for a good song.

VIDEO: "Mala Leche" music video

And here is a translation of the "Mala Leche" lyrics:

Evil Intentions

It’s 4 o’clock, the bus is still not here

People around me won’t stop talking

and they drive you nuts

Sweat rolls down my ears

I’m talking about just another typical day

 

It’s 6.45, I get on the crowded bus

Nauseated by the bad smell of the guy beside me

People pushing all the time

People with evil intentions

Others who hammer my ears

 

We’re a mixture of grease and iron

We’re like cows hurrying to the slaughter-house

We’re like ants going into a hole

We’re a ball of fire

 

I find people who live to make things worse for me

People who don’t talk, only bark

People who spit words

If I don’t hurt you, don’t pick on me

If I don’t hurt you, why your evil intentions?

Ah! Tell me what I did to you to make you target me

Relax and cooperate,

Can't operate on the fat in your brain

Don’t take it so hard, your shouting unnerves me

Ah! But tell me, tell me

Why your evil intentions?

7 o’clock in the morning, I slowly eat breakfast

As if I lived in a palace

(Instead of) this tenement and its noise

The lights are still not on

Without a doubt, today will be fun

 

I spend 15 minutes spying on my neighbour

I get turned on and she doesn’t even look at me

The electricity bill is killing me

But what can I do, if living is also killing me

 

Now my brain is in a coma

Now my life is a car without tires

Now I was so happy with my vices

All is well when I'm immoveable

I don’t bring solutions, I don’t give surprises

Why am I to be blamed because of your headaches

If we're doing the same, don’t obsess on me

Give your brain a chance to relax

We come from a unique lineage

If we're the heat that burns deeply,

Why don’t we treat each other as brothers

My heart beats when they call me Cuban

 

MALA LECHE ( POR MONEDA DURA )

Las 4 de la tarde, la guagua que no llega

La gente que no para de hablar y que se desespera

Gotas de sudor que caen por mis ojeras

Te cuento de otro día normal

 

Las 6:45 me subo apretado

Revuelto por el mal olor que trae el tipo de al lado

La gente que te empuja todo el tiempo

Gente sin pena, otros que taladran fuerte en las orejas.

 

Somos una masa de grasa y acero

Somos como vacas que se apuran hasta el matadero

Somos las hormigas que van al agujero

Somos una braza de fuego

 

Y todavía me encuentro con gente que vive

Para ponérmela más mala

Gente que no habla, solo que te ladra

Gente que escupe las palabras

Si yo no te hago daño, no es pa’ que te despeches

Si yo no te hago daño

¿Cuál es tu mala leche?

Ay! Pero dime qué te hice para que me toques las narices

Relájate y coopera la grasa en el cerebro no se opera

Oye no es para tanto, tus gritos ya me vienen estresando

Ay! Pero dime, dime, dime

¿Cuál es tu mala leche?

7 de la mañana desayuno despacio

Como si estuviera en un palacio

El barrio con su bulla

La luz que no ha venido

Hoy va a ser, sin duda, un día entretenido

 

Paso 15 minutos espiando a mi vecina

Yo que me enveneno y la muy zorra no me mira

La cuenta de la electricidad me está acabando

Pero qué voy a hacer si es que vivir me está matando

 

Ahora que tengo mi cerebro en coma

Ahora que el carro de mi vida está sin gomas

Ahora que estaba tan tranquilo con mis vicios

Ahora que todo sale cuando me encapricho

No traigo soluciones, no regalo sorpresas

Qué culpa tengo yo de tus dolores de cabeza

Si estamos en lo mismo, no te ofendas no te reprendas

Dale un chance a tu cerebro pa’ que se distienda

 

Venimos de una estirpe única en el mundo

Si somos el calor que quema desde lo más profundo

Dime por qué no nos tratamos como hermanos

Me late el corazón cuando me dicen cubano.

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Comments

I'm not Cuban and I don't speak spanish, But unless there is a hidden message in the song, I don't see any problem with it. I guess you have to live in Cuba to fully understand what the song means.
THAT'S ONE PARANOID GOV'T.
Raul Castro has told the Cuban people to speak up about the problems of daily life, and we know they're doing that. There are meetings going on all over the country, from what the news reports tell us. Yet the record was released and we're not hearing that it's been withdrawn from the catalog of the EGREM recording company.

There's an underground world of CDs and recorded movies which are sold pretty openly. Seems like an example of nature abhoring a vacuum. People will find a way to complain if they want to. Cubans are never shy about doing that.

A few years back the same band made a record called "El Callejero" in which a Cuban said that he wasn't interested in meeting foreigners, getting taken to Varadero and everything which is implied in that. The song was very, very popular, probably because it spoke to something real in the daily lives of Cubans, which is filled with small, and not so small, frustrations.

This song is talking about one of the things which drive Cubans crazy, the lousy public transportation system. I'd think the government would be glad the people are complaining as they've been asked to do.

Cuba has had problems like this through the years, but they've become a lot less from what I hear. Maybe someone just had a bad hair day?
I'm glad there is a band for our people, Finally to get the word out of how bad it really is in Cuba if you don't have access to the dollar.
I don't agree that the phrase "mala leche" means evil intentions in this context. In my opinion the phrase "mala leche" in this song describes the mood of some cuban people (bad mood in this case). Don't know where the "evil intentions" translation came from, but it sure would raise a flag for someone who does not speak Spanish. Maybe that is the intention.
For those who understand spanish, the words to this song is powerful and mesmerizing. It is of a people struggling o make sense of their day to day life. A  life that is impoverished by a corrupt government that has had their head in the sand and can't tell what century it is. I salute this group for this incredible song and to the cuban people who continue to be enslaved by Castro. To quote the famous latin pianist and latin percussionist Eddie Palmieri: "For man, for all mankind there should be never no fears, never no walls, only liberty in the coming years".
Ok, sounds like more whining to me,,,probably sohould be more concerned about their music being downloaded for free, then the smell on the bus, but being it was a cuban sitting next to him I'm surprised his heart didn't just give out...  
tell me can you go to a bar in cuba and light up a smoke ? think about it.
Mr. Waltet Lippmann, you seem an expert on the matter. What amazes me is that you speak with such authority that were it not for  us real Cuban/Americans others would beleive you as well.

Seems to me you could work for the present day White House Admin. they need a good spin Dr.

Please; you have no clue!

My family can not visit me in the lobby of my hotel, they must wait like dogs in the street.

Complainers maybe there is no hope so why not.
PS I've been in this country since I was four years old I am now 50. Just incase you think I am a recent arrival.
I am also in healthcare and Sicko was a farce.
My family which is also in Healthcare on the Island Nation asked for numerous surgical items (i.e. sutures, antibiotics, IV solution, anesthesia,etc) so my uncle (runs a Lab)could have his opperation.

Please turn in your socialist card in when you reach the US if Venezuelz and Cuba are a good alternative for people like you that miss inform the nation.
Are you kidding? That video was so politicaly negative to the Island. The double standards and the second class citizen of the cuban population is what this video was placing front and center.

The palace, the war regalia (Angola), wow!

I am surprized they have not been picked up,... yet.

Viva Cuba Libre, ya viene llegando!!!!!! Gracias Chirino
Translation: Live Cuba Free, it's comming on it's way!!!! Thank you Chirino (The singer who sang "ya viene LLegando".
Libertad!!!
White youth complaining about being near black and poor people. Too bad for them. I also suppose Cuba should not have helped Angola. Maybe Apartheid should have continued.
Mala leche is NOT "evil intentions."  
The term leche (milk) has several meanings in Cuban argot. First, it has a sexual connotation, i.e. sperm. {A la jebita le corrio la leche por la pierna). In
Then, there is a positive use of the term "leche" such as in a baseball game when someone catches a difficult ball, the player is called "lechero" - meaning that he had good luck. In this case it implies that the person performed above his usual capabilities. It means much more than luck, though.
Mala leche, on the other hand, refers to someone who woke up in a bad mood or who is always in a bad mood.  It can mean doing something "in bad faith" or as it is said in Spanish "intención aviesa."

It is NOT "evil" intention. The cubanos seldom use phrases that refer to "evil"  - that is a typical north American translation.

It should be noted that the song and video were produced in Cuba, and shown on Cuban television. Two nights ago Radio Taino broadcast the song. EGREM produced a DVD that contained that song. Cuban TV also has shown video clips of Mala Leche.

A google search shows positive references to Mala Leche in a number of Cuban publications (Ahora from Holguin, Juventud Rebelde in Havana, etc).

Moneda Dura, Carlos Varela or Fabrika have more critical lyrics than Mala Leche. I think that the words are not the controversial issue in this particular case.
I don't see why the Cuban Government censured this song. Its very much like what I experienced today and at other times on the Los Angeles County (California, USA) Metropolitan Authority buses and MetroRail trains.
Regarding the condition of the tenaments: a great many of us have problems with the basic services in our apartments.


--Lilith Kayden
Actually, coming from Cuba as a child over 40 years ago, hardly makes you an expert on Cuba, Marta Gonzalez. You do not have to be a "real Cuban-American" to know what is going on in Cuba. Walter Lippman is a journalist who lives most of the time in Cuba, up to the present day. I imagine he has a better take on things than ANYONE, Cuban-American, Cuban or just plain American who visits de vez en cuando.
Marta, go to www.walterlippmann.com .  
Thank you Marta Gonzalez, it takes someone really close to the people in that country to bring what is really going on there to light. I can hardly wait for that country to live free and the same for Venezuela, its not too late Venezuela to!!!!
viva Moneda Dura! Over the years I've met Cubans who were lucky to get out, unfortunately leaving loved ones behind. The best way out though is change and if Moneda Dura's song iniates that, Bravo.
If this song creates intention to do harm to others, then it should be ban.
Truth sears and burns like no other idea........
Who cares?
It's impossible for someone who has not experienced a repressive society to comprehend the difficulties and courage needed to criticise the oppressive government.   I left Cuba in 1968 as a six year old – and even at such a young age I was reprimanded in school for commenting about the government.
From what I gather - this song is making a statement that the average individual cannot afford to fix their car - that it's depressive to live in a society where no one can be trusted and depression is so bad that most are in a "bad mood" - even getting turned on by one's neighbor is not a high as she did not respond to his needs. The transportation system is not great and everyone is on top of each other - plus more...

I'm not Hispanic - but I have lived in proverty here in the States... so I know what it's like to be ignored - to walk around - with life - and yet feel that you are in a bubble and there is no escape...

Perhaps the band's statement is that things are not rosy in Cuba and the Cuban govt. is not happy about the truth being exposed... that's my thoughts.. as for the Cubans - I pray that they will be set free and live according to their inner desires... according to their ways.. not anyone else's... Viva Cuba !!
Look back at the end of Communism inEast Germany and eastern Europe in the late 80's and early 90's. There was an underground movement with artists long before that, then it became a popular movement. Castro will die in a few years, if not sooner. There is a strong probability that Communism will end in Cuba as it did in Eastern Europe. That is why the government is so paranoid of music or any kind of art that is a protest. They know it will inspire more anti-government feeling.


....LIFT the Embargo it has not worked 40yrs is  
enough.  
Sounds more  like a govt' that is the reason why America is paranoid. I don't know much about Castro, mabey he is a whacko, but at least he has somehow managed to keep the U.S. govt. at bay.
Finding a message in this song is pure paranoia by the government.  Sadly, there's a lot of that still in Cuba these days.
Yip, I'm Cuban-American. The latter offers many freedoms of all types and sorts. The former only totalitarianism. The hiphen is a bridge for FREEDOM! Down with Castro! God Bless the USA!!
that is a very bad traslation of the song.
cuban exiles, a exile is forced to leave not leave on their own accord stay fight the good fight, freedom only can come from within not from 90 miles away. if the youth of cuba are happy change will never come the us embargo along with ranting exiles helped keep castro in power
The real problem with Cuba is successive Republican Administrations that have refused to open up Cuba to Americans. Helms-Burton is a mistake. Republicans will go to any length to court pit bulled, antagonistic voters who share only one issue. The Cuban people do not hate Americans. We were the antagonists twice in the history of Cuba. Once under Rough Rider Teddy Roosevelt and once under a carry over failed plan that Kennedy inherited from Ike. Both times the mission failed-- once because the US blew up its own ship the Maine, and once because we wanted to reinstall the Mafia in its casinos in Havana. Kennedy later paid with his life for this fiasco.
Cuba is beautiful, especially Varadero. Clinton did not have the courage to recognize Cuba, just like he did not have the courage to investigate Reagan, North & Bush for their cocaine import and Iran arms sales to the US and Nicaragua. Nor did he investigate Passport Gate. We need leaders who love people not money in the US. Prohibiting the free exchange and flow of people is just plain unAmerican. Why are we a nation of sheep who let our "ignorant leaders" tell us how to think? We are all like Alfred E. Newman who coined the phrase-- What me worry? Yes, he is in the White House now.
Governments hate people. People one on one do not hate strangers because of their skin or nationality. Americans wake up and stop hating the world because our leaders love the munition, arms and bankers of London to make money and keep them in office.
Jesus never said to allow America to become engaged in constant wars to make money for the politicians and oligarchy who feed us freedom but give us angst and defeat in their name but cloak it in the name of God and false patriotism. Saying God Bless America, and Support Our Troops is not found anywhere in the Bible. Jesus said Love one another as you love yourself. Turn the other cheek. Let him who is without sin cast the first stone. That is what he said. HE did not say Hate thy neighbor and Kill thy neighbor-- 1,000,000 innocent Iraqis. Shame on us!!
The Communist regime censors everything and anybody that is  critical of their system is labeled a counter-revolutionary, in fact they repress all freedoms. The government there fills the prisons with political prisoners and the American Liberal media like MSNBC, NBC, CNN, The New York Times, etc. sympathizes with them. The media almost never publishes stories about the real Cuba. There is no investigative reporting. Always reporting the leftist points of view. (That causes their ratings to continue to go down). When was the last time that we saw here in the U.S.A. a story about the cuban prisons, about their criminal justice system, about their courts and their "attorneys" if there are any real attorneys there. What do people eat, what night clubs are there for the real people of Cuba not the places for foreigners that have to be paid for in dollars where the cuban people are forbiden to enter. They are affraid of being spelled from the island.
The song could've been written in any city of any country. It speaks about a spec of time in the life of someone who is fed up with social situations that we all face. Of course, the guilt of the Cuban government creates the paranoia that it is that government the reason for the oppression (which has contributed to it tremendosouly), however, the desperation of a bad situation could happen anywhere, in any city of any country.
I think there is nothing wrong with that song. Freedom of speach. Cuba obviously doesn't know what that means, but then again, I live in AMERICA, and you know what, USA is beginning to forget what that is as well. American leaders are trying to create a dictatorship just like in Cuba, when are the average people of these nations going to start standing up for what they believe is right? Without musicians many don't have a voice.
Wow, if you think this song is just about the public transportation, you didn't read the lyrics. I don't speak Spanish, but the English version seems very critical. From little things such as the bus being late, to people who bark, spit their words at you. "Bark" evokes images of hostile people yelling. "As if I lived in a palace (Instead of) this tenement and its noise" doesn't make Cuba seem like a Paradise. With this song, I suppose the band really will be "like cows hurrying to the slaughter-house"



Unfortunately, the situation is Cuba is more complex than what many of the writers portray. It is not some socialist paradise that some of the left in this country would like you to believe. However it also is not a dark, evil, dystopian society like the Miami Cubans would like you to believe.

I am not Cuban, but have visited. Yes, it is a very poor society, with much of the infrastructure about to collapse and the shelves of the stores are mostly empty. However, the Cuban people, although poor, are healthy and seem to enjoy themselves, regardless of the situation.

They also have no trouble speaking their mind, at least not to us. We hired a gypsy cabbie who acted as our driver/guide for several of the days we were there; he had no trouble waiting for us in the lobby of our hotel when he came to pick us up, nor was it ever a problem for him to accompany us where ever we went.

We tended to visit the less-touristy area so we could interact with the Cubans and there was one overriding opinion that many had. When the change comes, the Cubans have very little interest in all of the Miami Cubans coming back to help.

In many cases we felt a sense of resentment the Cubans had toward those who had abandoned the country. Many believed (like many Americans), that if it wasn't for the vocal opposition created by the Cuban Americans, the U.S. probably would have dropped the embargo long ago and in turn would have done more to liberate Cuba than any silly paranoid embargo or Radio Marti could ever do. Just look at the Iron Curtain if you want a precedent.
I don't see how it criticizes any particular form of government. Slow transportation systems? Heck, we've got that here in the good ol' U S of A. Maybe the song just bombed in test screenings or some such - happens here all the time. But because it's a Cuban band, it's obviously government censorship, right?

I'm not saying it isn't...but there are other explanations, and Cuba isn't the only place where a band feels they're unjustly kept from a wider audience, rightly or wrongly.
If (mala leche) mean bad milk,where is (bad intention) is coming from,could some one tell me...
I'm always outdone when I read comments from people complaining how corrupt, evil the current Cuban Government is now, but never do you hear these Cuban/Latin (generally very racist, classist, etc.) complain or tell the truth about how evil, corrupt the Batista Government was prior to Casto.  The simple fact is a number of people are about one form of terror for another.  Tell the truth about screwed up it was prior to Castro and work toward equality for all Cubans in the future.
I completely agree with Chris Montanez.  I am 1/4 Cuban and recall the 1950s well.  I continue to read what is happening there, and I know the frustration of the people.  I also know my own frustration of not being able to visit the land my father so loved.  For those who do not thing evil intention exists there, my guess is that you perhaps do not know the history of the Carribean, and of unique Cuba.  I also would guess that you do not keep up with what the conditions actually are there, as told by those who do get to visit.  Please take time to do so.  
I find more interesting to read the comments than the lyrics them-
selves. Nobody needs to undestand Spanish to read the English trans-
lation to get "the message". It shows, with all my respects, how ig-
norant are people away from South Florida about the condition of the
Cuban people after 48 years of one of the most repressive dictator-
ship in the history of the World. Fortunately, and saddly, in South Flo-
rida we not only watch the "official" Communist island's only TV chan-
nel, but are in contact with thousands of people who escape in rafts
and other means from a country where people cannot leave, cannot
visit hotels - AND HOSPITALS - where tourists spend their Euros, or
dollars or buy sex from underage boys and girls (sanctioned by the
regime); and cannot express their opinion other than "satisfactory"
to the Communist elite. Yes, right now, after Raul's theatrical scene offering that 'People express their opinion", dissidents are being
arrested and beaten by the governmet's thugs for any sign of desire
of freedom and democracy. En Cuba the only newspapers are the gov
ernment's, same with the TV. People cannot own computers nor have
satelite antennas so that they cannot get news from outside. People
who go and film something like Michael Moore, do it only after being
approved for what they are going to film, and what he showed was what is only available to government officials, like the mummy who is
still alive, and for the tourists with plenty of dollars. Cubans go to
other so-calles hospitals and have to bring their own cotton, sheets,
light bulbs, alcohol, and pesticides agains roaches and rats. THIS IS
THE MESSAGE IN THE SONG, both in Spanish and English.
Cuba is the worst country in the Western Hemisphere.

Raul Castro doesn't want anything. It's a farce... They are gaining time. Negotiations are under way for the Castro clan to leave Cuba to a safe heaven (Spain, probably)

Even in poor Haiti... people can sing whatever they want...
Walter Lippman is like many people outside Cuba who have ABSOLUTELY zero idea of what's taking place inside Cuba.  Walter, move with your family to Cuba for a month and I want to watch you cry and plead to be saved.  I travel much to Cuba on Humanitarian missions.  Cuba is worse everyday  (unless you're at the top of the gov't, or a tourist.  Cuba is a HELL for the Cuban people, God Save Them!
Walter Lippman is like many people outside Cuba who have ABSOLUTELY zero idea of what's taking place inside Cuba.  Walter, move with your family to Cuba for a month and I want to watch you cry and plead to be saved.  I travel much to Cuba on Humanitarian missions.  Cuba is worse everyday  (unless you're at the top of the gov't, or a tourist.  Cuba is a HELL for the Cuban people, God Save Them!
I think Cubans will find out like many in the US already have that capitalism works for a scant few. There is a free ride for those with money but its a tough world for the rest of us here. The threat posed by socialist values forces the US to constantly misrepresent the reality of Cuba and to spread radical propoganda. Cuba's rich culture will be lost once the Miami crowd get their way.
Estas sonando despierta, Marta! Lo que viene llegando es es socialismo a Venezuela. Cuba es, y siempre sera socialista. Usted tiene la osadia de hablar de la escasez de medicamentos y equipos medicos en Cuba. Acaso no ha oido del bloque?
You're daydreaming, Martha! What is coming is socialism to Venezuela. Cuba is, and always will be socialist. You dare to speak of the lack of medicine and medical equipment in Cuba. Haven't you ever heard of the blockade (embargo)?
Michael Moore would condemn this band... How dare them say anything negative about his beloved Cuba... Viva Castro... isn't that right Michael???
Mala leche originating in Spain. It means to be mean. Tennement means a house or other building in which, after Communism took over, many strange people are forced to live together. Don't compare transportation problems in the States with those of Cuba. We could write a book to explain why the song was banned.It says a lot betwen the lines about the miserable codnitions of the enslaved people of Cuba. Apartheid had nothing to do with Angola. etc. etc. Wish I could spell it all out for some of you. Pitty that we are at only 90 miles and most people know nothing about Cuba, including gross & constant human rights violations.
Ah!! Isn't America (or ra5ther, the United States) the greatest place on Earth?
Freedom of speech is such that any misinformed ignorant is able to speak about things he does not have the faintest clue.
Why is it that most people want to express what they think (?) irrespective of the degree of stupidity involved?
I would humbly suggest that before expressing an opinion about anything as delicate as the fate of a nation (which is composed of human beings, sons and daughters of the same God we worship) our esteemed writers should do a little investigating, instead of expressing whatever comes to their feverish minds.
However, I do respect the right they have to say what they wish.
L. M. B.
So the America hating terrorist group the "American Family Association" must be operating in Havana now.

Send the rest of them there!


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