Yahoo – AFP,
Florence PANOUSSIAN, November 16, 2017
Bogota (AFP) - A woman playing trumpet in a salsa band in traditionally macho South America is a rare thing. It's rarer still when that woman is Dutch.
![]() |
| Dutch musician and trumpet player Maite Hontele (C) performs in a bar with a salsa band in Bogota -- she says she's "Colombian at heartt" (AFP Photo/ Raul Arboleda) |
Bogota (AFP) - A woman playing trumpet in a salsa band in traditionally macho South America is a rare thing. It's rarer still when that woman is Dutch.
Since
arriving on Colombia's salsa scene, Maite Hontele has been blasting her horn to
full houses from Bogota to Seoul and has gradually won the respect of salsa's
greats.
"I was
born on the wrong continent," says Hontele, a tall, blonde 37-year old
from the central Netherlands.
She insists
she's "Colombian at heart."
Her love
affair with the country began when she played Bogota's Teatro Colon while
visiting from the Netherlands in 2003 with the Rumbata Big Band. The audience
loved her and the feeling was mutual.
"I
fell in love with Colombia, with its people, its cities, its energy, its
diversity," she says in an interview at her apartment in Bogota's bohemian
La Macarena quarter.
Hontele
followed her heart and her trumpet to Colombia, settling in Medellin for seven
years and churning out record after record as well as touring with her own
band.
Now she
plays regularly with the greats of the genre -- people like Panama's Ruben
Blades, Venezuela's Oscar D'Leon and the Buena Vista Social Club from Cuba.
In 2014, official
recognition came when her album "Dejame asi" (Leave Me Like This) was
nominated for Best Salsa Album at the Latin Grammys, and she shared the
limelight with such stars as Marc Anthony and Tito Nieves.
She has
just returned to Colombia from Havana, where she spent two months recording her
fifth album, "Cuba linda" (Beautiful Cuba) with the Orquesta Aragon.
Her latest
single, "Casi Muero" (I nearly died), from the album of the same
name, came out on November 3.
That
evening, Maite was back where it all started, at Bogota's "big,
beautiful" 800-seat Teatro Colon.
![]() |
Hontele
plays to a full house at Bogota's Teatro Colon (AFP Photo/Luis Acosta)
|
On their
feet
The
sell-out crowd was on its feet from the opening notes of the third song in her
set, "Maria Cristina me quiere gobernar" (Maria Cristina wants to
control me).
From the
stage right down to the cheap seats, fans danced between the red velvet seats
while Hontele grooved on stage with her musicians.
The crowd
took up the chorus of some of her best known tunes, "Que bonito" (How
Nice) and "Nonchecita."
Like many
in the crowd that night, Jaime Ospino, 49, knew all the material.
"This
is a great concert," he told AFP.
In early
October, Hontele was playing to another full house at the Cafe Libro, the
Colombian capital's top spot for tropical music.
Long-time
fan Angela Ramirez was there celebrating her 38th birthday.
"I've
always loved salsa. But the idea of a Dutch woman who plays the trumpet in
Colombia gives me chills!" Ramirez said.
Salsa
from the cradle
Hontele
laughs about a certain irony in her life story: "I never chose the
trumpet," she says. The instrument chose her.
She first
held a trumpet as a nine-year old when playing in a local brass band in her
home village of Haaften.
She was
immersed in Latin American music as a child, raised to the rhythms of her
father's collection of Caribbean vinyl records.
![]() |
Hontele
often has her fans dancing throughout her sets (AFP Photo/Luis Acosta)
|
"I
grew up with these sounds," she says. "He would go to Paris to look
for records, just off the presses. Celia Cruz, the Gran Combo of Puerto Rico,
etc."
No surprise
then that as a 14-year-old, she preferred to play Latin American music. She
convinced the Rotterdam Conservatory to bring in a specialized Latin music
teacher rather than be forced to go the usual route of classical or jazz
training.
She began
playing in Dutch nightclubs as a teenager, "until six in the morning --
the only woman in a group of men, playing merengue, bachata, and Cuban
salsa."
Looking
back, getting out on the club scene was "the best education."
For her,
the secret of rhythm lies "not only in the technique, but where the flavor
is, and the flavor is in the street -- that's where you have to look for
it."
These days,
she finds that flavor in Bogota's streets, which she moves through in true
Dutch style -- by bicycle.
She claims
to be a vegan, listens to Cuban sounds as much as Bach or pop, and even as she
prepares for a European tour, she says she just wants to be the "the
neighbor who plays the trumpet."
"It
doesn't interest me to be famous, to ride in a limousine," Hontele says.
She's
already played with some of South America's greats, but apart from Sting, her
biggest dream is to play with Carlos Vives.
"It
would close the circle," she says.
As a kid,
already steeped in the music but without a word of Spanish, she sang along to
the Colombian singer's hit at the time, "Pa' Mayte" (For Mayte),
reading into it a kind of musical destiny.
"I
thought it was about me," she says.
Dutch woman with a trumpet taking Colombian salsa by storm https://t.co/EywZdC37uM - by @Arroussiak for @AFP pic.twitter.com/mq8xiKRixm— AFP news agency (@AFP) November 16, 2017
A woman playing trumpet in a salsa band in traditionally macho South America is a rare thing. It's rarer still when that woman is Dutch pic.twitter.com/yNqtmrAp3K— AFP news agency (@AFP) November 18, 2017



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