Carlos Mejía Godoy
Carlos Mejía Godoy (born June 27, 1943) is a Nicaraguan musician, composer and singer-songwriter and one of the main representatives of the testimonial song or new song of his country.
He grew up in a family related to popular music, folklore and traditional culture, which gave him a very early relationship with the cultural and artistic world of Nicaragua.[1] He had a close friendship with the guitarist of the Camerata Bach and Los de Palacagüina, Pedro Miranda, and with the Nicaraguan musician Silvio Linarte.
Carlos and Luis Enrique were pivotal in the New Song Movement in Central America beginning in the 1970s. They were both honored with Nicaragua's highest cultural distinction, the Order of Rubén Darío.
He actively participated in the Sandinista Revolution, composing a good part of the songs associated with it and spreading the cause of the fight against the dictatorship of Anastasio Somoza Debayle throughout the world. After the revolutionary triumph, he was one of the main cultural promoters of the Sandinista governments. After the loss of power of the FSLN in the 1990 elections, he left the FSLN and gradually became politically distant from this party and the leadership exercised by Daniel Ortega, becoming an active participant in the 2018 protests.[2]
Early life and career
Carlos Mejía Godoy was born in Somoto, Madriz on June 27, 1943. He was the son of Carlos Mejía Fajardo, a popular musician, and María Elsa Godoy, a school teacher and bread maker. His brother Luis Enrique Mejía Godoy, two years his junior, is also a Nicaraguan musician.[1]
In 1954, he left his hometown and continued his elementary and high school studies until starting university in the 1960s, where he began to collaborate as a radio host, actor, and script writer. His relationship with the radio would continue into the 1970s, standing out as an actor and creator of satirical radio programs. It was at this time that he came to develop his first musical works.[3]
In that period he began to stand out with his work "Alforja Campesina" which was performed by the trio "Los Madrigales". Together with the trio "Los Bisturices Armónicos" he is dedicated to the investigation and study of Nicaraguan folklore, collecting and disseminating old peasant songs. The songs of social content for which he noted his sympathy for the revolutionary movement of Sandinista National Liberation Front and his integration into the student movement at the university are from those years. Songs like "Yo no puedo callar", "Desde Siuna con amor", "Muchacha del F.S.L.N." or "The grave of the guerrilla" are from that time.
At the end of the 1960s, incorporated into Radio Corporación de Managua, he created the character "Corporito", which, as he himself admits, allowed him to discover himself as a communicator, as he described it in 1993:
He sang a parody every day, changing the lyrics to well-known songs and adapting it to some political and social problem.
After the 1972 earthquake, he founded the "Taller de Sonido Popular" together with Humberto Quintanilla, Milcíades Poveda Herrera, Enrique Duarte, Silvio Linarte and Pablo Martínez Téllez (El Guadalupano) and joined the group "Gradas". As a member of the "National Song Salvation Brigade" he followed the path of rescuing many Nicaraguan folkloric pieces.
Music career
Many of his songs, performed with his band los de Palacagüina, became associated with the Sandinista movement as songs of the workers and revolutionaries. He even composed a Mass for the working class, the Misa Campesina Nicaragüense. Many of his songs during the late 1970s gave instructions on how to use, assemble, and disassemble the rifles people were capturing from dictator Somoza's National Guard during street battles.[4][5][6][7][8]
One of his biggest achievements of his career as a songwriter came in 1977 when the song Quincho Barrilete (Quincho, the boy of the little barrel), composed by himself and performed by Eduardo Gonzalez won the sixth edition of the OTI Festival. A victory which is still remembered by many Nicaraguans.
In 1980, Carlos Mejía Godoy y los de Palancagüina were internally selected by Televicentro Nicaragua to represent their country in the OTI Festival in 1980 with their song La chavalita de España (The little girl from Spain). This song marked the return of Nicaragua to the event after two years of absence because of the turbulent Nicaraguan Revolution. Their competing song, which although was one of the favorites, ended in a respectable but disappointing tenth place with 15 points.
He was the vice-presidential running mate of Edmundo Jarquín of the Sandinista Renovation Movement (MRS) in the November 2006 presidential election. They came in fourth place.
In February 2021, Mejía Godoy condemned a proposed law that would declare the songs of the Nicaraguan National Guard, as Heritage of the Nation, considering it confiscatory of his work.[9]
Family and Personal Life
Mejía Godoy is the father of the United States Army deserter and author Camilo Mejía, as well as the musicians Carlos Luis 'La Bujilla' Mejía and Augusto 'El Negro' Mejía from the Grammy-nominated Nicaraguan ensemble La Cuneta Son Machín.[10][11]
As one of president Daniel Ortega's fiercest critics, he fears being killed.[12][13] He lived in Costa Rica from 2018-2020. Since 2020 he has lived in Santa Rosa, California.[14]
Mejia Godoy is married to Xochitl Jimenez.[15]
Discography
- Albums
Some of his albums include: El Son Nuestro De Cada Día, La Nueva Milpa, Grandes Éxitos, and A Dos Puyas, No Hay Toro Valiente.
- Contributing artist
His music has been featured on several compilations of songs of Nicaragua and the Nicaraguan revolution: Songs of the Nicaraguan Revolution, Vol.1-2, and Nicaraguita: Music from Nicaragua. He was also featured in The Rough Guide to the Music of Central America (2002, World Music Network). Mejía Godoy was featured on the title track from La Cuneta Son Machín's Cañambuco (2017, Round Whirled Records).
Jefferson Starship recorded one of his songs for their 2008 album Jefferson's Tree of Liberty
References
- "Biografia de Carlos Mejía Godoy". www.biografiasyvidas.com. Retrieved 2023-04-03.
- Maldonado, Carlos S. (2018-08-11). "El nuevo exilio de Carlos Mejía Godoy". El País (in Spanish). ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved 2023-04-03.
- "--- Carlos Mej[ia Godoy ----". losmejiagodoy.com. Archived from the original on 2016-06-29. Retrieved 2023-04-03.
- "Guitarra Armada". Retrieved 6 September 2010.
- Belli, Gioconda (2002). The Country Under My Skin. Alfred A. Knopf. pp. 229. ISBN 978-0-375-40370-5.
- "Disco| Guitara Armada (Guitar Armed)". Al Sur de Rio Bravo. Archived from the original on 21 August 2010. Retrieved 6 September 2010.
- Plunkett, Hazel (2007). Nicaragua in Focus: A Guide to the People, Politics and Culture. Interlink Publishing Group, Inc. pp. 82–83. ISBN 978-1-56656-438-0.
- Sheperd, John (2003). Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World: Media, industry and society. Continuum International Publishing Group. p. 390.
- "El músico Carlos Mejía Godoy afirma que una propuesta legislativa busca robarle sus creaciones". CNN (in Spanish). 11 February 2021. Retrieved February 11, 2021.
- Bennett, Sarah (11 February 2016). "La Cuneta Son Machín Are Proud to Be Nicaragua's First Grammy-Nominated Band". LA Weekly. Retrieved 12 February 2018.
- Eparaza Loera, Juan (3 February 2018). "Mezcla de música tradicional con lo nuevo resulta en éxito para La Cuneta Son Machín". Vida en el valle. Retrieved 12 February 2018.
- ""Mi vida estaba en peligro": Cantautor Carlos Mejía Godoy salió de Nicaragua y está en Costa Rica - Teletica". teletica.com. 3 August 2018.
- Phillips, Tom; correspondent, Latin America (2018-08-04). "'My life was in danger': much-loved Nicaraguan singer and Ortega critic forced to flee". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2020-02-04.
- Robinson, Circles (2023-06-07). "Carlos Mejia Godoy Turns 80 in Exile". Havana Times. Retrieved 2023-09-23.
- "Exiled Nicaraguan singer, activist calls Santa Rosa home". Santa Rosa Press Democrat. 2023-06-19. Retrieved 2023-09-23.