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Newsweek: Ricky Martin: At His Shows, 'You Can See the Guy Taking the Girl, a Bunch of Guys Alone, Parents and Grandparents. I Want People To See That'

   NEWSWEEK
This is the cover of the May 31, 1999 issue of Newsweek (on newsstands Monday, May 24). The cover story "Technology: What Will You Want Next?" explores how a seamless Internet connection in everything from dishwashers to coffee makers to palm-held computers could make the PC obsolete. The issue includes a guest essay from Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates dismissing the predictions of PC-doom. (PRNewsFoto)[DM]
NEW YORK, NY USA
Martin, Jennifer Lopez Talk Cross-Cultural Fame:  'It's Always a Good Time to
  Be Latin,' Says Lopez -- But Legend Celia Cruz Says She, Puente, Are 'Not
                             Where We Want To Be'

    NEW YORK, May 23 /PRNewswire/ -- Cross-cultural singing sensation Ricky
Martin says he is pleased that his music reaches such a broad audience:  "If
you go to a concert of mine," Martin tells Newsweek, "you can see the guy
taking the girl, a bunch of guys alone, parents and grandparents.  I want
people to see that."
    (Photo:  http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/19990522/HSSA016 )
    During a series of interviews conducted last month, Martin was soft-spoken
and formal, unlike the average U.S. pop star, report General Editor Veronica
Chambers and Senior Editor John Leland.  And after 15 years in the spotlight,
he still seems to enjoy it.  "I meditate every morning," he says.  "Not to be
dramatic, but there's a lot of people in the entertainment business who aren't
[around] today."  He ends every show with an Indian greeting, namaste, learned
on a recent trip to India which he calls a spiritual awakening.  "I felt a
comfort I never felt before.  If you listen to Hindi music, it connects to the
Gypsy music from Spain, which connects back to Latin America."  Martin, who
was born in Puerto Rico, where he discovered Journey and David Bowie, feels
comfortable with many styles but is loyal to his roots. "I play with cultures.
I can play with Anglo sounds, but in my blood, in my veins, it's Latin," he
says in the May 31, 1999 issue (on newsstands Monday, May 24).
    Martin, whose new English-language album debuts at No. 1 on the Billboard
chart, and Lopez, whose first album will be released next week, are riding the
first important demographic wave of the next millennium: by 2009, Latinos will
pass African-Americans as the largest minority in the United States.  Latin
music sales in the U.S. neared $600 million in 1998, and are up 46 percent so
far this year.  In her plush hotel suite in New York recently, Lopez made
light of the timing.  "It's always," she said, "a good time to be Latin."  And
now "the world is starting to see what it's like to grow up in a Latin family:
the flavor and the culture and the passion and the music.  We're a very
passionate people."
    Will the success of stars like Martin open the floodgates for other
Latinos?  Desmond Child, co-writer of Martin's hit song "Livin' La Vida Loca,"
is doubtful.  "When people say the Latin music explosion, I beg to differ," he
says.  "There's been one artist, and his name is Ricky Martin."  Celia Cruz,
the queen of salsa, says of the American audience, "Si no entiende, no
atiende: if they don't understand, they don't pay attention.  They'll play
Gloria Estefan, and now Ricky Martin, who has recorded in English."  But salsa
legends like herself and percussionist Tito Puente, she says, still "don't get
played.  We've advanced, but we're not where we want to be."
    But Lopez's fame is already having a positive effect on Latinas:
"Jennifer's butt is to die" says Nely Galan, the first female president of the
Spanish-language TV network Telemundo. "[Latina] girls grow up with hourglass
figures and big butts, and the women you see become movie stars are tall, thin
and hipless, more like Gwyneth Paltrow.  Now all these Latina girls are going,
'Good, my butt is hot'."

    (Story follows)

  Hot Commodities Ricky Martin and Jennifer Lopez Are Pop's Triple Threats:
        They Can Sing, They Can Dance and They Don't Look Bad, Either

                      By Veronica Chambers and John Leland
                               Lovin' La Vida Loca

    They looked so good, Jennifer Lopez and Ricky Martin, as only the truly
beautiful can, and even then only by the genius of the hairdressers to the
truly beautiful. Skintight, designer suedes and leathers gave way to lacy
nothings and tighter leathers. A hand crept here, a hip dipped there. But even
so, all was not right in the Manhattan photo studio. With each progressively
slinkier outfit, Lopez stopped for a reaction from Sean (Puffy) Combs, who was
along to offer support and direction. Lopez describes the rap impresario as
just a friend. Now he demonstrated the range of his friendship. The earpiece
from his mobile phone dangling from one ear, he approached Lopez, silently,
palm extended. Everything froze. The actress parted her perfectly glossed lips
and deposited her chewing gum in his hand. Jennifer and Ricky were now ready
for their close-up.
    Ricky Martin and Jennifer Lopez -- does it get any hotter than this? His
new album, "Ricky Martin," his first in English, debuts this week at No. 1 on
the Billboard chart, and his in-store appearances have stopped traffic on both
coasts. Lopez -- star of "Out of Sight" and "Selena" -- releases her debut
album, "On the 6," next week. Multiskilled, multilingual entertainers, Martin
and Lopez are riding the first important demographic wave of the next
millennium: by 2009, Latinos will pass African-Americans as the largest
minority group in the United States. Sales of Latin music in the United States
neared $600 million in 1998, and are up 46 percent so far this year. In her
plush hotel suite in New York recently, Lopez made light of the timing.
Hugging her knees to her chest, bare ankles peeking out from her tight Capri
pants, she smiled mischievously. "It's always," she said, "a good time to be
Latin."
    Before Ricky Martin began his English-language album, his managers called
for an anthem in Spanglish: something Anglo audiences could rock to, with
enough Spanish to gratify his core Latino base. "Also," says the veteran
songwriter Desmond Child, "we wanted to write the millennium party song from
hell." They came up with "Livin' La Vida Loca," a caffeinated rock number
drenched in swing. Before the English-speaking public even knew his name,
Martin, an alum of the Puerto Rican boy band Menudo and later "General
Hospital," had launched an enormously successful solo career. His previous
four albums, all in Spanish, sold more than 15 million copies worldwide and
scored No. 1 hits in 30 countries. "Livin' La Vida Loca" made it 31. After a
decade of grunged- or thugged-out male pop stars, here was a wholesome, safe-
sex symbol for all persuasions. "If you go to a concert of mine," he says
appreciatively, "you can see the guy taking the girl, a bunch of guys alone,
parents and grandparents. I want people to see that."
    In a luxe villa on Lake Como, Italy, Martin offers an Indian greeting
called a namaste. The reverent bow, which also closes every performance, is a
humble counterpoint to his global-size ambitions. He has come here to perform
the English songs for the first time, small challenge for his European fans:
they've already loved him in Spanish, French, Italian and Portuguese. He
picked up the namaste on a recent trip to India, which he calls a spiritual
awakening. "I felt a comfort I never felt before. If you listen to Hindi
music, it connects to the Gypsy music from Spain, which connects back to Latin
America." A volcanic live performer, in person he is soft-spoken and formal as
few American pop stars are. After 15 years in the spotlight, he still seems to
enjoy it. "I meditate every morning," he says. "The adrenaline you deal with
every day can be fatal. Not to be dramatic, but there's a lot of people in the
entertainment business who aren't [around] today."
    Martin's songs are less Latin workouts (sidebar: contemporary Latin hits)
than frothy cocktails of global pop styles. "La Copa de la Vida," which he
sang at the Grammy Awards, is vaguely Brazilian in rhythm and instrumentation.
"Be Careful (Cuidado Con Mi Corazon)" features Madonna, mother to the most
famous Latina baby in America, singing in Spanish, while Ricky responds in
English. "I play with cultures," says Martin, who was raised in Puerto Rico,
where he discovered Journey and David Bowie before Tito Puente. "I can play
with Anglo sounds, but in my blood, in my veins, it's Latin."
    Martin takes pains to assure his Latino audience that he isn't deserting
them to sing in English. But his fans live a crossover existence: translating
ideas and experiences from Spanish into English, then back again, every day.
At a CD signing in Miami's South Beach, Leana Villareal, 21, a student at the
University of Florida in Gainesville, is tired but eager after waiting in line
since the night before. "I became Ricky's fan when he was on a Mexican soap
opera called 'Alcanzar Una Estrella II'," she says. Villareal met her friend
Maribel Alicia, 24, online at the Ricky Martin Web site. "I love the way he's
always true to himself and true to Puerto Rico," says Alicia, who is half
Chilean and half Cuban. "You've got to be proud of the way that he's broken
down so many barriers."
    In the pantheon of Latina America, Lopez cuts a very different profile.
"Jennifer's butt," says Nely Galn, the first female president of the Spanish-
language TV network Telemundo, "is to die. [Latina] girls grow up with
hourglass figures and big butts, and the women you see become movie stars are
tall, thin and hipless, more like Gwyneth Paltrow. Now all these Latina girls
are going, 'Good, my butt is hot'."
    At Sony recording studios in Manhattan, Lopez is feeling her roots. Today
she is dressed in tight T shirt and jeans for an MTV interview in a subway
station. The famous makeup artist Kevyn Aucoin and equally famous hairstylist
Orib_ are on hand to perfect the look: Latina girl from the Bronx. It is an
easy stretch. Born and raised in the Bronx, the daughter of a Puerto Rican
teacher and computer specialist, Lopez always wanted to be an entertainer,
even back in Holy Family Catholic School. She got her first break as a dancing
Fly Girl on TV's "In Living Color," and has simply added careers from there.
"If I could describe myself in a few words," she says, "'strong' would be one
of them. I know what I want, and I'm willing to go after it." Her album, a
slick mix of R&B and Latinish grooves, is a testimony to that ambition, a
funky extension of the Lopez brand. Singing almost wholly in English, Lopez
carries the songs simply, without much fuss. "Now," she says, "the world is
starting to see what it's like to grow up in a Latin family: the flavor and
the culture and the passion and the music. We're a very passionate people."
She laughs about having jumped a subway turnstile at the MTV interview. "I've
gotta work out," she gasps, patting her hip. "My ass!"
    Will Martin's success open the floodgates for other Latin musicians?
Desmond Child is doubtful. "When people say the Latin music explosion, I beg
to differ," he says. "There's been one artist, and his name is Ricky Martin."
Celia Cruz, the queen of salsa music, says of the American audience, "Si no
entiende, no atiende: if they don't understand, they don't pay attention.
They'll play Gloria Estefan, and now Ricky Martin, who has recorded in
English." But salsa legends like herself and Tito Puente, she says, still
"don't get played. We've advanced, but we're not where we want to be."
    The salsa star Marc Anthony, who is recording his own English-language
album in the studio next to Lopez's, stops in to say hello. Anthony sang a
duet on Lopez's album -- all in the Sony family, under the eye of corporate
impresario Tommy Mottola -- and he has just returned from a meeting at the
label. "I went shopping today," he tells Lopez. "Oh, yeah," she asks. "For
what?" "Money." This surely is where the real advances will be made, in the
corporate suites. A decade ago Latin music was a niche business, as were rap,
country and alternative. In the splintered new world order, says Mottola,
"this is a core business for us." Timing, after all, is everything. Ricky and
Jennifer are ready for their crossover.


SOURCE Newsweek




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