Cuban Cubism is central to Aruán Ortiz‘s musical identity — but in this album, his vision extends far beyond. While the 1930s Negritude movement was a literary endeavor, Ortiz seeks to embody that movement not through words but through music. His compositions channel their spirit with abstraction, tension, and a deep sense of diasporic reflection.
Ortiz, born in Santiago de Cuba — the island’s second-largest city — is shaped by its distinctive sonic culture. His influences stretch widely, encompassing American and European 20th-century composers such as Schoenberg, Ligeti, and Xenakis, as well as icons of funk and soul like James Brown and Sly Stone.
Now based in Brooklyn, Ortiz is a pianist,…
