Jorge Drexler: Poetry, music and identity
Jorge Drexler is a musician and the first Uruguayan to win an Oscar. His music plays with genre and influence, combining subtle harmonies and regional styles with electronic effects. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
that you need to put into a song.
was a circular coaster,
my teacher dictated.
living among Christians
nor who my brothers are."
an impression on me.
Joaquín. Did you write them?"
named Chicho Sánchez Ferlosio,
but also a great poet.
to express something for a while,
and go home to write,
and said, "Hang on, hang on,"
sure what Décimas were,
to tell my teacher I didn't know.
"Yeah, I totally understand" face,
what Décimas were.
that we have in Spanish.
date of origin,
a musician and poet from Málaga.
he was the same guy
the Spanish guitar.
just like the Spanish guitar,
from Mexico to Chile,
some form of the Décima
a different name,
more than 20 in total on the continent.
it's called the "Son Jarocho,"
so integrated into our traditions,
from each place are completely convinced
in their country.
that it developed independently
400 years after its creation,
syllable and line structure --
during the Spanish Baroque period.
and then later you can look online
each line has eight syllables.
with the fourth and the fifth;
with the seventh and the tenth;
trying to write in Décimas.
with the same structure
an impressive musicality to it,
that I wrote for this song.
just on the musicality of the rhymes.
to the translation --
it you have them.
of the words for a few seconds,
the choreography of sound of the Décima.
that does not cause me pain,
and another life blown away.
no matter what the disguise,
under any flag,
than a sad piece of cloth."
your headphones back on.
because here it is 426 years later,
you just heard the second.
recently learned how,
in its current state.
a concert in Israel,
that hits really close to home,
are non-practicing Christians.
where the two traditions lived together
dressed as Santa Claus, for example,
at the synagogue wearing his kippah,
expression that I probably had
in that kind of environment,
the difficulty the opposing parties have
side's shoes even for a moment.
and the content.
where I'm from, to Spain.
who are away from home.
to be very, very Uruguayan,
there is -- the milonga.
and after finding out
the Décima as their own,
the milonga is Uruguayan?
that we musicians call 3-3-2.
one two three, one two.
in the brothels of Persia,
five centuries later,
with the African slaves.
it encounters the Roma scale --
to klezmer music,
bring to Brooklyn, New York.
an Argentine kid of Italian origin
of the second half of the 20th century
one two three, one two.
a 19th-century German instrument
that weren't allowed to buy organs,
in Río de la Plata,
of the tango and the milonga,
just as important as the bandoneon did:
Vicente Espinel, in the 16th century,
are coming full circle.
since the song was born
with four lines written on a coaster
is infinitely dense,
after a concert.
and that everywhere I go I ask about it,
for me at their house.
is one of the styles of music
finished playing
which is the son jarocho,
for their gift of music,
of intentions -- he says,
alive the purest origins
I didn't really know what to say.
I gave him a hug and left, but ...
but at the same time,
and in the Décima,
from all over the place, like he said.
I thought about it for a while.
to know about our roots,
to understand our history.
as knowing where we're from,
in Jerusalem the golden
for every commandment.
and although I bleed through your wound,
has my deepest affection,
worth more than a human life.
who lives among Christians
nor who my brothers are.
nor who my brothers are.
cause me pain, there are no winners
and another life blown away.
no matter what the disguise,
under any flag,
than a sad piece of cloth.
who lives among Christians
nor who my brothers are.
nor who my brothers are.
to for killing in my name,
and if there is a God, this was his wish,
will live on, once I am gone
will suffer the same fate,
that has not proclaimed itself
who lives among Christians
nor who my brothers are.
nor who my brothers are.
who lives among Christians
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Jorge Drexler - Musician, poetJorge Drexler is a musician and the first Uruguayan to win an Oscar. His music plays with genre and influence, combining subtle harmonies and regional styles with electronic effects.
Why you should listen
Jorge Drexler doesn't lay claim to one identity over another. Born to a German-Jewish exile father and a Uruguayan mother, Drexler grew up in Uruguay, traveled widely across Latin America and eventually settled in Spain. Within his music, you can hear touches of milonga and bossa nova and even Bach, as his lyrics wrangle with notions of nationality and belonging, language, identity and love.
Like both of his parents, Drexler started his career as a physician, but at the age of 30, he decided to pursue music full-time. The release of his fifth album, Frontera, caught the attention of Brazilian director Walter Salles, who tapped him to write the closing song for the 2004 film Motorcycle Diaries. Titled "Al Otro Lado del Río" (The Other Side of the River), the song won Drexler an Academy Award for Best Original Song and propelled him into the international spotlight.
Over the course of his 25-year career, Jorge Drexler has produced 12 albums, received 15 Latin Grammy nomination (with two wins in 2014 Record of the Year and Best Singer-Songwriter Album), four US Grammy nominations, 5 ASCAP Latin Awards, and one Academy Award. He has also collaborated with musicians from Shakira to Mercedes Sosa to Neneh Cherry and Jovanotti.
Jorge Drexler | Speaker | TED.com