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Susana Baca: Tiny Desk (Home) Concert

From Sept. 15 through Oct. 15, Tiny Desk is celebrating Latinx Heritage Month with an El Tiny takeover, featuring Jessie Reyez, Girl Ultra and more musicians from all corners of Latinidad.

At the Babel library and bookstore in Lima, Peru, Susana Baca is surrounded by books, wine and percussion. In addition to their instruments, her band members play the desk they sit around itself, an organic setting that blurs the boundaries between music and context. "Estamos aqui, todos unidos por la música en este bello pupitre," she laughs: "We're here, all united by music at this beautiful desk." The percussive fugue of "Molino Molero" ends sharply before, by contrast, the unwound and languorous "Dämmerung" stretches beneath her clarion voice.

In addition to being a musician, Baca has worked as an ethnomusicologist, a schoolteacher and Peru's former Minister of Culture; she's a curator of folklore and culture of the highest order. Throughout her El Tiny performance, the camera shifts to an overhead shot of the desk, featuring her 2021 album Palabras Urgentes beside several books and a note that says "Eres lo que lees" (You are what you read). Her performance, like all of her music, is intimate because it's situated, musically and thematically, in a specific time and place.

Across her many careers, Baca's work is always in service of preserving and honoring African and Indigenous art forms. Her rendition of "Sorongo," written by Puerto Rican composer Tite Curet Alonso, is an electric and pulsing homage, transmuting the salsa of the original to a meditation driven by the drums, cajón and cheko, grounding the narrative of African enslavement across Latin America in Afro-Peruvian percussion. The same goes for her closer, a salsafied version of Chabuca Granda's "Canterurías," which she introduces as "Afro-Peruvian bonus track en Babel!"

In this library, you are what you read. Joyfully running her hands along the spines of books behind her, Baca reminds us not just of the essential texts, but how to examine them with intention, precision and rapture.

SET LIST

  • "Molino Molero"
  • "Dämmerung"
  • "Sorongo"
  • "Canterurías"
  • MUSICIANS

  • Susana Baca: vocals
  • Óscar Huaranga: bass
  • Jonathan Mendoza: acoustic guitar, vocals
  • Alex Quijandría: percussion, vocals
  • Manuel Mejía: percussion, vocals
  • Luis Miguel Diaz: percussion
  • Renzo Vignati: electric guitar
  • Juan Carlos Aliaga Del Bosque: piano, violin
  • Jorge Campos: vocalist
  • CREDITS

  • Producer: Ricardo Pereira
  • Director: Giancarlo Aponte
  • Cameras: Gustavo de la Torre Casal, William Marquina, Jair Guillén, Fernando Galván
  • Art and Styling: Amaro Casanova
  • Camera Grip & Dolly: Omar Salazar
  • Editing and Color: Giancarlo Aponte
  • Audio Recording Engineer: Fico Hoyle
  • Mixing and Mastering: Óscar Huaranga
  • Filmed at Babel library and bookstore
  • TINY DESK TEAM

  • Producer: Anamaria Sayre
  • Video Editor: Joshua Bryant
  • Audio Mastering: Josh Rogosin
  • Tiny Production Team: Bob Boilen, Bobby Carter, Kara Frame, Marissa Lorusso, Hazel Cills, Maia Stern, Ashley Pointer, Felix Contreras, Fi O'Reilly
  • VP, Visuals and Music: Keith Jenkins
  • Senior VP, Programming: Anya Grundmann
  • Copyright 2022 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

    Corrected: October 13, 2022 at 12:00 AM EDT
    A previous version of this post credited two musicians in the performances as Luis Miguel and Juan Carlos. Their names are Luis Miguel Diaz and Juan Carlos Aliaga Del Bosque. These credits have also been updated to include vocalist Jorge Campos.
    Stefanie Fernández