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Lamento Borincano

"Lamento Borincano"
Single by Rafael Hernández Marín
Released 1929
Format
Recorded 1929
Genre bolero
Length 6:37
Label Sony Discos
Songwriter(s) Rafael Hernández Marín
Producer(s) Fernandito Álvarez
External audio
You may listen to Luciano Quiñones piano interpretation of Hernandez' "Lamento Borincano" here

"Lamento Borincano" (English: Puerto Rican Mourning) is Rafael Hernández Marín's acclaimed composition in Puerto Rico's patriotic tradition. It takes its name from the free musical form Lament (, ), and from Borinquen, an indigenous name for the island. Hernández released the song in 1929 to illustrate the economic precariousness that had engulfed the Puerto Rican farmer since the late 1920s' Puerto Rico. It became an instantaneous hit in Puerto Rico and its popularity soon followed in any countries of Latin America. Renown international artists have sung it and featured it in their repertoire.

Hernandez composed the song while he lived in New York City, in Spanish Harlem. That same year, he also wrote his masterpiece, "Preciosa". In 1947, Hernández returned to Puerto Rico to become an orchestra director at the government-owned WIPR Radio.Lamento Borincano was interpreted by dozens of artists and became an important part of Puerto Rican culture.

In 1929, 17-year-old Davilita met Rafael Hernández by chance. Davilita got along quite well with Hernández Marín and was able to see the unfinished version of Hernandez's "Lamento Borincano". Davilita asked Hernandez if he could record the song but, Hernandez thought that Davilita was too young and declined his request. The song was to be recorded by Ramon "Canario" Quiroz with Davilita and Fausto Delgado as back-ups. However, fate had a different plan: Quiroz became ill on the day of the recording and Davilita ended up doing the recording as the lead voice.

The song reflects the economic situation of the poor farmers in the Puerto Rico during the 1920s years leading to the Great Depression. The song starts with a cheerful and optimistic tone, presenting the jibarito, (a self-subsistence farmer descendant from the taino, Spaniards and/or African people, who is the iconic reflection of the Puerto Rican people of the day. The jibarito was a farmer-salesman who heads to town to sell his load of fruits and vegetables. Disappointed to see the poverty that in town and unable to sell his load, the jibarito returns home with his load unsold. The song does not name Puerto Rico by its modern name, instead using its former pre-Columbian name "Borinquen".


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