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User:TheLastPuzzlePiece/Tiburón (Rubén Blades song)

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This article is about the Rubén Blades song. For other uses, see Tiburón (disambiguation).

"Tiburón"
Song by Willie Colón and Rubén Blades
from the album Canciones del Solar de los Aburridos
LanguageSpanish
English titleShark
GenreSalsa
Length7:00
LabelFania Records
Songwriter(s)Rubén Blades

Tiburón (Spanish: Shark) is a salsa song by Panamanian musicians Rubén Blades and Willie Colón which appeared on their 1981 album Canciones del Solar de los Aburridos.[1] The song is a metaphor for American intervention in Latin America, with the titular shark representing the influence of American imperialism in the region.[2] Throughout the second half of the song, the singers shout the phrase, "si lo ven que viene, ¡palo al tiburón!" ("If you see him coming, [bring a] stick to the shark!")

Reception

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Music critic Dave Marsh listed "Tiburón" as one of his top 20 political songs written after 1976, calling it "the original anti-Central America invasion protest."[2] At the time of its release, American radios played the song infrequently, and it was heavily unpopular among the Cuban community in Miami.[1] In a 1991 interview, Colón said that politically charged songs like "Tiburón" and "Pedro Navaja" were so controversial that he and Blades occasionally performed them in bulletproof vests.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Canciones Del Solar De Los Aburridos – Fania". www.fania.com. Retrieved 2020-05-05.
  2. ^ a b Jones, Mother. "Rock 'n' Revolution". Mother Jones. Retrieved 2020-05-05.
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