"I am an immigrant.
I have experienced many cultures, I have witnessed fatigue, solidarity, hope.
Many times we do not need to leave our country, sometimes by simply moving to other neighborhoods we return to seek that warmth, that strength to break barriers, and grow with dignity."
So says Guadeloupean composer Alyssa Regent in a video for "Mors osculi," a song cycle commissioned by the Americas Society that she recorded in February 2024.
It's part of the society's "Give to Music at Americas Society" series, in which singer-songwriters from around the region send in videos, reports NPR.
Peru's Olga Milla, for example, sent over a version of her tondero song "El Calor del Norte," which she says is "born from that search for a personal orientation (figuratively, 'north') that every human being needs, like a welcoming hug."
Pick'a, meanwhile, sent over a version of her song "Mi culpa," which she says is "a song that cries out for freedom in the face of the emotion of guilt, and an invitation to communicate your feelings before death arrives."
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