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PBS Celebrates Hispanic Heritage Month
with a Documentary Recognizing the Latino Contribution to American Music
The Latin Music USA
Four-Part Documentary to Launch During Hispanic Heritage Month on October
12th and 19th
September 15, 2009 --
Did you know Salsa came from New York? That the Kingsmen's "Louie Louie" is
a cha cha cha? How did rap meet
reggae to make Reggaeton?
In honor of Hispanic
Heritage Month, PBS will premiere Latin Music USA, a four-hour documentary
series celebrating the Latin rhythms at the heart of jazz, rock, country and
rhythm and blues and highlighting the great American music created by
Latinos. Revealing the Latin sounds that have influenced the music of great
American artists from the Drifters to the Isley Brothers to Santana, the
documentary aims to reach lovers of music everywhere, along with fans of
American history and everyone who loves to dance.
Airing in primetime on Mondays, October 12 and 19, 9:00-11:00 p.m. ET on
PBS, the documentary series is narrated by acclaimed Golden Globe and
Emmy-award winning actor Jimmy Smits and features the stories of Latino
artists Celia Cruz, Carlos Santana, the Fania All-Stars, Shakira, Gloria
Estefan and Ricky Martin, along with exclusive interviews and
never-before-seen footage.
The life experiences of the artists featured in the documentary reveal how
Latinos have reinvented their music in the United States and forged new
identities within this country, while never losing sight of their own rich
traditions.
"LATIN MUSIC USA is a cornerstone of PBS' celebration of Hispanic Heritage
Month this year," said John F. Wilson, PBS Chief TV Programming Executive.
"It's a program for everyone who loves to explore music, dance and American
history and their fascinating connections to our overall culture."
PBS' celebration of Hispanic Heritage Month extends beyond the broadcast and
onto pbs.org. PBS' video player (pbs.org/video) -- where viewers can watch
hours of free PBS programming online and on their own time -- features an
extensive lineup of programs honoring and exploring Latino culture in "Nuestras
Historias | Our Stories," a special Hispanic Heritage Month collection.
LATIN MUSIC USA will premiere online on October 13 (English) and 14
(Spanish) as part of this collection. "Nuestras Historias | Our Stories" is
at www.pbs.org/nuestrashistorias.
Latin Music USA was produced by a team led by WGBH, in co-production with
the BBC. The documentary series anchors a comprehensive multimedia project
-- on air, online, in print and in the community -- that explores the
vibrant musical conversations between Latinos and non-Latinos that have
helped shape the history of popular music in the United States for more than
five decades.
"We are thrilled to have Latin Music USA showcased during Hispanic Heritage
Month," states Executive Producer Elizabeth Deane. "This is a groundbreaking
series, a fresh take on our musical history, reaching across time and across
musical genres to tell the story of music created by Latinos and embraced by
all."
As part of the project's multimedia and multicultural approach, Latin Music
USA has partnered with the Spanish TV network V-me to premiere the series on
two consecutive Tuesdays, October 13th and 20th at 10 p.m., fully translated
and narrated in Spanish by Leila Cobo, one of the world's foremost experts
in contemporary Latin music.
Latin Music USA is comprised of four 60-minute episodes featuring a
fast-paced mix of music and interviews:
-- Episode One, BRIDGES (10/12, 9-10 p.m. on PBS): The first hour traces the
rise of Latin jazz and the explosion of the mambo and the cha cha cha as
they swept the U.S. from East to West and looks at how Latin music
infiltrated rhythm and blues and rock 'n' roll through the 1960s.
-- Episode Two, THE
SALSA REVOLUTION (10/12, 10-11 p.m. on PBS): The second hour explores how
Puerto Ricans and other Latinos in New York reinvented the Cuban son and the
Puerto Rican plena by adding elements from soul and jazz to create Salsa,
which became a defining rhythm for Latinos the world over.
-- Episode Three, THE
CHICANO WAVE (10/19, 9-10 p.m. on PBS): Mexican Americans in California,
Texas and throughout the Southwest created their own distinct musical voices
during the second half of the 20th century. This episodes shows how their
music played an important role in the struggle for Chicano civil rights and
ultimately propelled them from the barrio to the national stage.
-- Episode Four, DIVAS AND SUPERSTARS (10/19, 10-11 p.m. on PBS): The final
hour focuses on the Latin pop explosion of the turn of the 21st century and
the success of artists like Ricky Martin, Gloria Estefan and Shakira in the
English-language market. As studios concentrate on star-driven pop, Latino
youth gravitate toward urban fusions like Spanish rap and Reggaeton, as well
as Rock en Espanol.
Funding for Latin Music USA is provided by the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting and public television viewers.
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