SOUNDTRACK: AJ DAVILA-“Es Verano Ya” (Field Recordings, September 24, 2014).

AJ Davila is part of the “unhinged Puerto Rican garage-rock band” Davila 666. For this Field Recording [Garage-Rocker AJ Davila Unplugs In A Hair Salon] he plays an acoustic song in a hair salon.
Davila says that New York is like another town of Puerto Rico. That people from Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic have made their homes and communities here.
There’s a joke that says the biggest town in Puerto Rico is called New York. Several waves of diaspora have created a deep and complex relationship between Puerto Ricans and the city. Boricuas have had an immense influence on the Big Apple — its music, its literature, its landscape, and even its cuisine.
He says that a small place like a barbershop (or beauty salon) can feel like you’re in your house. “This is a song about hanging out with your friends. It’s a summer song.”
We asked Davila to delight a Spanish Harlem beauty salon with a summer song. It’s appropriate: He’s one of the warmest souls I know — someone with whom it’s a pleasure to discuss art and music, argue about politics or tell silly jokes. He’s also a uniquely talented musician, with a style that combines garage-rock, punk and even elements of hip-hop.
This song probably rocks, but this acoustic version is lighter, with some bouncy chords from the other guitarist Daniel Ortiz and delightful backing vocals from Lola Pistola. It’s somehow even better when they laugh off a tiny mistake.
[READ: September 14, 2017] ”Sunrise, Sunset”
This is a story of three generations of a Haitain family.
Carole is elderly and is slowly forgetting a lot–a blank look comes over her face and she forgets that she put her keys in the fridge or that her daughter is related to her.
Her daughter, Jeanne, and son-in-law James (they were known as JJ) just had a son, Jude (now known as Triple J). But Jeanne has been in the throes of post-partum depression. James is a saint about it but Carole is furious that her daughter is lying around. Back in Haiti, Carole did not have the luxury of depression.
Carole lived under a dictator. She watched her neighbors get dragged out of their houses by the dictator’s henchmen. Carole’s father fled the country and she never saw him again.
But things are better here. And Carole likes to try to play sunrise sunset (lifting a blanket off of her grandson’s face) like she did with Jeanne. Carole’s husband knows how far along she is–he has taken her to doctor and he lives with her, but they hold up a united front in trying to keep her home.
Jeanne knows that she is less than caring for her son. She wishes she could learn to be a good mother. She also wonders if her mother was happier in Haiti. She thinks not and yet she loves saying that only Carole has the right to be sad. She never wanted to be a housewife. Yet here she is. She is lucky that Jude is an easy baby.
There is a moment of drama (which I didn’t fully believe) in which Carole dangles the baby off the balcony. Is she in a state of confusion or is she trying to wake Jeanne from her stupor?

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