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Afrodiaspora

6.6M streams

6,649,729

Susana Baca

6.6M streams

6,643,620

jomalón (feat. Susana Baca)

2.4M streams

2,359,380

Eco de Sombras

1.9M streams

1,901,342

Vestida de Vida

692.9K streams

692,943

Palabras Urgentes

642.7K streams

642,701

Maestra Vida

601.4K streams

601,437

Del Fuego y el Agua

567.7K streams

567,730

Espiritu Vivo

552.8K streams

552,772

A Capella: Grabado en Casa Durante la ...

526.1K streams

526,108

Biography

With a splendid voice and equally impressive interpretive gifts, Susana Baca is a primary exponent of the Afro-Peruvian musical tradition. Baca came to global attention in 1995, when her rendition of "Maria Lando," a heartbreaking ballad of Third World worker oppression, was included on David Byrne's The Soul of Black Peru compilation. Since then, she has toured the United States several times and released several albums, including an eponymously titled solo album on Byrne's Luaka Bop label; Del Fuego y del Agua for Tonga Productions; 2002's Espíritu Vivo, and 2006's Travesías. She followed with Seis Poemas in 2009. After a tour in support of 2010's Mama, Baca re-entered the studio and released Afrodiaspora in 2011. In recognition of her lifetime achievement, she was named Peru's Minister of Culture. In November 2011 she was elected to the Organization of American States (OAS) as the President of the Commission of Culture for the period 2011–2013. In 2016 she guested with Snarky Puppy on their Family Dinner, Vol. 2. She recorded A Capella: Grabado en Casa Durante la Cuarentena alone at home during the pandemic, and she returned to recording with a band for 2021's Palabras Urgentes. Baca was born in the Black coastal barrio of Chorrillos, outside Lima, where descendants of slaves have lived since the days of the Spanish Empire. Her family was interested in music; her father played the guitar, her mother was a dancer, and she grew up listening to Cuban musicians like Pérez Prado and Beny Moré. Baca's singing first came to public attention when she was a student. She formed an experimental group combining poetry and song, and started performing after receiving grants from Peru's Institute of Modern Art and the National Institute of Peruvian Culture. She attracted the attention of the composer and singer Chabuca Granda, who became her mentor. Granda encouraged Baca to record, but a 1983 record deal fell apart upon Granda's death. Baca then turned her attention to researching the Afro-Peruvian tradition. With her husband, globally renowned musician Ricardo Pereira, she founded the Instituto Negrocontinuo (Black Continuum) in Lima, which is dedicated to preserving Afro-Peruvian culture. She released the Seis Poemas EP in 2009, following it with the full-length, globally acclaimed Afrodiaspora in 2010. That year, Baca was appointed Peru's Minister of Culture. She was only the second Afro-Peruvian to hold the position. In November 2011 she was elected to the Organization of American States (OAS) as President of the Commission of Culture, where she served for two years. She resumed performing in 2014 and, in 2016, guested on two tracks from Snarky Puppy's Family Dinner, Vol. 2. Shortly after beginning a recording project with her band, the COVID-19 pandemic hit. At the suggestion of her husband, she abandoned the project and recorded A Capella: Grabado en Casa Durante la Cuarentena at home without accompaniment. It was comprised of classic songs she often performed solo in concert. Baca returned to ensemble recording for 2021's Palabras Urgentes. Celebrating her 50th year in the music business, she chose Snarky Puppy's Michael League as her producer. She cut songs with long histories including "La Herida Oscura" by longtime friend Chabuca Granda, and the 1937 hit tango "Milonga de Mis Amores" by Pedro Laurenz. She included the salsa standard "Sorongo" by Tite Curet Alonso, and re-recorded "Vestida de Vida," the title track from her 1997 album Vestida de Vida: Canto Negro de Las Americas. ~ Spencer Harrington, Rovi