Watch CBS News

Cuban musicians orchestrate growing harmony between U.S. and Cuba

After a year of planning and 50 years of diplomatic sour notes, jazz musicians from Cuba got the chance to serenade an American audience in Chicago
Cuban musicians perform on American soil 02:53

CHICAGO --It was one year ago this week that the U.S. began restoring diplomatic ties with Cuba, severed a half century ago. That historic moment led to a musical breakthrough for an ensemble of young Cuban jazz musicians..

Performing for the first time on American soil at Chicago's Auditorium Theatre, 24-year-old conductor Ernesto Lima says there's a message in their music.

EN REYNOLDS CUBA 2
Ernesto Lima conducts the group of Cuban jazz musicians CBS News

"Jazz is improvisation, and improvisation is freedom," said Lima.

Their concert was a year in the making, and the dream of the Chicago Jazz Philharmonic's Artistic Director, Robert Davis.

"We have to think about the people, the musicians, the culture," Davis said. "The music is everybody's and its what they value. If they can trust us with that, they'll trust us with other things."

EN REYNOLDS CUBA 2
Wendy Galvez CBS News

CBS News first met Davis and these students a year ago in Havana, Cuba. Twenty-one-year-old Wendy Galvez has been playing violin since she was seven.

"Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald -- those are my gods," said Galvez.

Galvez, Lima, and the rest of the students study music in Havana, where the residue of jazz left over from America before the Castro revolution still echoes through the instruments.

Dizzy Gillespie's 1947 "Manteca" is one of the best examples of the two nations' musical collaboration -- before Fidel Castro closed jazz halls and clubs like the famous Tropicana.

The U.S. embargo that followed created another challenge -- access to quality instruments was hard to come by, which made their performance in Chicago all the more remarkable.

WATCH: Cuban jazz musicians break into dance during first U.S. performance 01:02

Galvez says she believes music is a universal language.

"Most of the group doesn't know how to speak English, but when you're playing, we understand perfectly, everything."

View CBS News In
CBS News App Open
Chrome Safari Continue
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.