

Cuban Hip Hop grew on the back of the Soviet collapse as much as on the Miami
airwaves. The economy, previously cushioned from the privations of the USA
trade embargo, fell to ruin. In response Fidel Castro ushered in the Special
Period whose panacea was tourist development and the introduction of
the US dollar.
The Special Period may have partially succeeded in its economic
aims but with it came inequality. Doctors and teachers, once the pillars of
society, were displaced in earning power by waiters and taxi drivers, those
with access to the tourist dollar. Black Cubans were largely excluded from
dollar jobs. Prostitution, hustling, police harassment and racism returned
to the streets. Raperos had something to sing about.
Left: Amehel Incera is a founder member of 'Hip Hop Union" which holds fortnightly concerts for up to 500 people. Right: Due to a lack of money, groups such as Simbolo Admision rehearse on each other's homes with little equipment.