Drinking hard liquor is really not
my thing. Seriously, it isn’t. In my area, drinking hard liquor straight usually
means whiskey or cognac, also known as brown liquor. Brown liquor, it’s often the mother’s milk
used by souls to wash away the lingering, unrequited scent of more.
I do drink socially on
occasion. My friends who drink don’t
call what I do drinking. I can nurse a
shot until the melting ice turns into liquory
flavored water. However… when I first
heard Ms Eva Ayllón’s version of Chabuca Granda’s Una Larga
Noche… though I only understood the words in the refrain as A Long Night, her smoldering delivery, the arrangement - I
could see myself going for a bottle of brown liquor.
Instead, I went for an internet
search to find a translation. I saw
differences in the translations. Then,
there was the word Zamacueca. Browser website searches gave me a lead. I saw mention of a dance. So, I searched for video. I found one.
I watched. “Oh! Okay, this might
take 2 bottles.”
Ms Granda’s original and Ms
Ayllón arrangement, I like both. I have
yet to listen to either song play completely through only twice. Ms Granda’s original is lingering perfume tossing
covers back sitting on the side of the bed with your hot face in your hands
pining away until a morning that never comes.
Ms Ayllón’s arrangement - all the previous plus turn up the flame until the
pot boils runs down the side and scorches then add brown liquor.
Eva Ayllón Use Translate on Your Web Brower http://www.evaayllon.net/eva.php or http://www.sonicbids.com/2/EPK/?epk_id=355695#bio |
Aside from Una Larga Noche,
when I play Ms Ayllón songs, something connects. Some would call it a common ancestry. I can’t deny that. The soulfulness in her voice is
familiar. Her dance shadows movements I
know. Her band, that rhythm section,
those percussions – who says that teleportation doesn’t exist. She beams me to a place both familiar and
foreign.
I will write about how and why
this post came to fruition in another blog post. For now, I want to thank Ms Ayllón and one of
her managers, Juan Morillo, for granting this country kid from Coosa County,
Alabama permission to post the translation they provided. Mr. Morillo wrote that the following
translation “...is closer to the original intent of the author, Chabuca Granda,
and Eva's interpretation.” Additionally,
Mr. Morillo provided links to her bio, tour information, and concert clips.
Una Larga Noche
(A Long Night)
Written by Chabuca Granda
A long night
envelops me and holds me
and it protects me and
loses me
Zamacueca, zamacueca
I lost a long night
Why is the night so long
And amazed and so lonely
and so heartless
If it's just if it's
just a long night
Zamacueca, zamacueca
It's just a long night
The night should be
A long dawn, scented,
clear
And blue, an embroidered
sheet
Of rumors and loves
or a morning star
invasive, vigilant
of my closed window
Zamacueca, zamacueca
of my closed window
My night is never dawn
That comes in the
morning
It's just a long ledge
That turns around
nothingness,
Zamacueca, zamacueca
That turns around
nothingness
It's just fear my night
Slow fear, slow and long
Always slow, always
within
Within a long night.
Zamacueca, zamacueca
I am lost in a long
night
and it’s just a long
night
zamacueca, zamacueca,
of my closed window
That turns around
nothingness
zamacueca, zamacueca
within a long night,
within a long night,
zamacueca, zamacueca,
within a long night.
Best not to drink at all. If you do, be responsible.
And Happy Valentine's Day
Fan of Ms Ayllón? Have a favorite song by her. List it here and tell us why.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LsnFvEQYJPU it captures well a regard for.
ReplyDeleteThanks Caroline. Doesn't look like all your message came through the post.
DeleteAH
Our oceans. Thanking you have a great eve Al
ReplyDeleteThis is wonderful! I wonder why you stopped short. There is more here...language and lyrics. And your connection is what is most interesting to me. That piece you can't describe where you engaged in relation to, through and with an experience that you recognize and regret all at the same time. Great stuff, Al. Pretty cool to meet another writer through Linked In Harvard Business page! Keep writing.
ReplyDeleteThanks Walker.
ReplyDelete