Cantos Cautivos
Testimonies
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- Music piece by:Sergio Vesely
- Testimony by:Sergio Vesely
- Experience in:
- Tags:
- « I don’t want to exaggerate but Camp Melinka became not only a factory that produced handicrafts and a performance hall but also a university. »
- [Read full testimony]
Published on: 23 September 2015
Captain, our Destiny is a Wandering Island (Capitán, el rumbo es una isla errante)
- Music piece by:Sergio Vesely
- Testimony by:Sergio Vesely
- Experience in:
- Tags:
- « This song was dedicated to Óscar Castro, whom I was lucky enough to meet in 1975, in Puchuncaví. With his experience in theatre – Óscar was already a fairly well-known actor before his arrest – he threw himself into the cultural work we had organised, in what was then called “Camp Melinka” where the prisoners presented a show every Friday. »
- [Read full testimony]
Published on: 23 September 2015
- Music piece by:Sergio Vesely
- Testimony by:Sergio Vesely
- Experience in:
- Tags:
- Sergio Vesely
- Campamento de Prisioneros Melinka, Puchuncaví
- Valparaíso Region
- King Ñaca Ñaca
- El rey Ñaca Ñaca
- #Original lyrics
- #Original music
- #Male narrator
- #Writing music
- #Singing/playing music
- #Listening to music
- #Music piece from Chile
- #Description of prison life
- #Relationship with prisoners
- #Relationship with agents
- #Humour
- #Collective singing
- #Visits
- « 'Ñaca-ñaca' was an interjection we used at Camp Melinka whenever we wanted to signal and poke fun at any dark thought that might cross our minds. That may be why it seemed the ideal name to give to the paper maché puppet that played the role of the mean king in the puppet stories we performed to entertain the children who came to visit their captive fathers. »
- [Read full testimony]
Published on: 23 September 2015
- Music piece by:Sergio Vesely
- Testimony by:Sergio Vesely
- Experience in:Cárcel de Valparaíso, 1976
- Tags:
- « The night of 24 March 1976, the residents of cell 198 hardly slept. We hadn’t slept on account of a long, heated discussion about the prospects of revolution in Latin America’s Southern Cone. »
- [Read full testimony]
Published on: 23 September 2015
- Music piece by:Chicho Sánchez Ferlosio
- Testimony by:Sergio Reyes Soto
- Experience in:Campamento de Prisioneros Isla Dawson, 1973 - 1974
- Tags:
- « This song, like so many others, was not at all “captive”. The revolutionary songs we sang behind bars imbued us with a sense of freedom.
Rolando Alarcón , and laterQuilapayún , introduced “Dicen que la patria es” (or “Canción de soldados”) to Chile. »- [Read full testimony]
Published on: 07 September 2015
- Music piece by:Arturo Dávalos
- Testimony by:Luis Cifuentes Seves
- Experience in:Campamento de Prisioneros Chacabuco, January - February 1974
- Tags:
- « A salamanca is a type of salamander that lives in caves in northern Argentina. By extension, it also represents the cave. In this song, the lyricist turns the salamanca into a place where a coven of witches gathers. »
- [Read full testimony]
Published on: 01 September 2015
- Music piece by:Violeta Parra
- Testimony by:Gabriela Durand
- Experience in:
- Tags:
- Gabriela Durand
- Recinto CNI, Cuartel Central Borgoño
- Metropolitana Region
- To Be Seventeen Again
- Volver a los diecisiete
- Violeta Parra
- #Female narrator
- #Singing/playing music
- #Listening to music
- #Music piece from Chile
- #Torture
- #Cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment
- #Music as torture
- #Music as cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment
- #Relationship with prisoners
- #Relationship with agents
- #Resilience
- #Solidarity
- #Reflection on memory
- « I was 18, and already I had been tortured on the
parrilla several times. One day I was with some other comrade prisoners, and as sometimes happened, the guards put some music on. »- [Read full testimony]
Published on: 01 September 2015
- Music piece by:José Ángel Espinoza, aka Ferrusquillo
- Testimony by:Marcia Scantlebury
- Experience in:Campamento de Prisioneros Cuatro Álamos, June 1975
- Tags:
- Marcia Scantlebury
- Campamento de Prisioneros Cuatro Álamos
- Metropolitana Region
- You Can Blame Me
- Échame a mí la culpa
- José Ángel Espinoza
- Ferrusquillo
- #Female narrator
- #Singing/playing music
- #Music piece from Mexico
- #Torture
- #Cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment
- #Relationship with prisoners
- #Resilience
- #Solidarity
- #Communication
- « Mexican songs - and this one in particular - have always moved me. When I shared a cell with Miriam Silva, a young woman who belonged to the Communist Youth, arrested by the DINA when she was handing out leaflets on the street, we killed time in an organised fashion to keep ourselves from getting depressed and overcome by anxiety due to an unknown fate. »
- [Read full testimony]
Published on: 28 August 2015
- Music piece by:René “Popeye” Cárdenas Eugenin
- Testimony by:María Soledad Ruiz Ovando
- Experience in:Campamento de Prisioneros Isla Dawson, 1973 - 1974
- Tags:
- María Soledad Ruiz Ovando
- Campamento de Prisioneros Isla Dawson
- Magallanes Region
- Let’s Break the Morning
- Rompamos la mañana
- René Cárdenas Eugenin
- #Original lyrics
- #Original music
- #Female narrator
- #Writing music
- #Listening to music
- #Music piece from Chile
- #Cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment
- #Relationship with prisoners
- #Reflection on memory
- #Show
- #Collective singing
- #Visits
- « Music was very important for us (my mother Sylvia, my sister Alejandra and myself) while my dad, Daniel Ruiz Oyarzo, 'el Negro Ruiz', was imprisoned during the dictatorship, when Alejandra was seven and I was four. »
- [Read full testimony]
Published on: 30 July 2015
- Music piece by:Chicho Sánchez Ferlosio. Popularized by Quilapayún
- Testimony by:Claudio Melgarejo
- Experience in:Comisaría de Concepción, November 1973
- Tags:
- « I spent a week in captivity, in November 1973. I didn’t hear many songs, but the most popular ones sung by my comrades were 'Venceremos' (We Shall be Victorious) and 'Que la tortilla se vuelva' (May the Omelette Flip Over), also known as 'The Tomato Song', which portrays the bosses' exploitation of the workers. »
- [Read full testimony]
Published on: 13 July 2015
- « This song, like so many others, was not at all “captive”. The revolutionary songs we sang behind bars imbued us with a sense of freedom.