Siboney (song)


"Siboney", also known as "Canto Siboney", is a 1927 song by Cuban composer Ernesto Lecuona. It was part of the 1927 revue La tierra de Venus, which featured singer Rita Montaner. The music is in cut time, originally written in C major. The lyrics were reportedly written by Lecuona while away from Cuba and is about the homesickness he was experiencing. The term "Siboney" refers to one of the indigenous tribes that inhabited Cuba before the arrival of the Spanish colonists and acts as a symbol for the island.
Siboney became a hit in 1931 when performed by Alfredo Brito and His Siboney Orchestra. Other artists followed suit, including Caterina Valente, Olga Guillot, Xiomara Alfaro, Dizzy Gillespie, René Touzet, Nana Mouskouri and Percy Faith. It was recorded by Connie Francis in 1960, and later included in the film 2046.
English lyrics were written by Dolly Morse, but they bear no resemblance to the original Spanish. The English version of the song was recorded by Bing Crosby on February 11, 1945 with Xavier Cugat conducting the Waldorf-Astoria Orchestra. Later in the same decade it was recorded for Muzak by Alfredo Antonini and his orchestra in collaboration with Victoria Cordova and John Serry Sr..

Film appearances

In the 1940 film “Third Finger, Left Hand” starring Myrna Loy and Melvyn Douglas, Siboney is played in the nightclub scene by the band. They dance The Rumba to it.
Grace Moore performed the song in the 1937 film When You're in Love.
In 1942, Gloria Jean sang the English version in the musical Get Hep to Love.
The song inspired the Mexican-Cuban film Siboney, directed by Juan Orol and starring María Antonieta Pons. The film was released in 1938 as a part of the so-called Rumberas film saga of the Mexican Cinema.
In 2004, Hong Kong director Wong Kar-Wai included the Connie Francis version in his romantic drama / science-fiction period film, “2046”. Of using Spanish-language music in his films, Wong has stated that it evokes the time period, the 1960s, as Latin music was popular in Hong Kong at the time.
In 2005, the Connie Francis version was included briefly in Michael Bay's 2005 sci-fi dystopian film The Island where Lincoln Six Echo and Jordan Two Delta are at the maglev station in Yucca after they ask the help of James McCord.
The song was used by Nino Rota in the score for Fellini's nostalgic memoir of the 1930s, Amarcord.