I learned non-narrated audio storytelling techniques in a #netxgenNPR workshop in 2016. A non-narrated piece means that you don’t have a narrator telling portions of the story. The interviewee(s) are the only voices in the tape. I found this technique challenging and I’ve been cultivating it as a skill for crafting interviews, and thinking sonically about what the listener is going to have in their head. I’m also passionated about sound design. Here’s a sample of what I’ve learned so far.

Acordeón fronterizo. Kiko Rodríguez (2021)

I met Kiko Rodríguez in Albuquerque, NM, and his journey with cumbia and accordion fascinated me. His story is featured in my Doméstika course on audio storytelling.

Gesel Mason.

From the Center Out - Archiving Black Dance In The US (2021)

Gesel, a choreographer living in Austin, Texas, walks us through solos that a hip-hop dancer and an expressionist dancer taught her over 10 years ago. "From the Center Out - archiving Black dance in the U.S." is about how a dancer's body remembers and what those memories sound like. During rehearsal, we're transported to scenes from the solos and we experience the stories and emotions driving them.

According to xmtr.fm:

“As Gesel dances, she talks and through her voice we experience her movement in a visceral sometimes uncomfortable way. If you’ve ever wondered how dance could be represented just through sound, this piece does exactly that”.

Production + Editing by Laura Marina Boria
Production + Sound Design Ana Cecilia.

Selected: Radiophrenia Festival, Scotland, 2021.

Also aired: XMTR.FM, November, 2021.

Rubén Cubillos.

From Selena to Juan Gabriel, this Designer Put a Face on Latino Music (2016)

#NPRNextGen Workshop, 2016.

To Ruben Cubillos, an album is like a home for music. Albums hold two of his passions: music and graphics.

Cubillos was born in El Paso, Texas. That’s where he learned to listen. At the end of the day, his grandparents would sit on the porch and sing Mexican songs by José Alfredo Jiménez. When his grandmother fetched for an item in her purse, Cubillos perked up his ears. He listened. 

“You could hear everything,” he said. “You could hear the pennies. You could hear the bobby pins … Call me crazy, but I loved that.”

Music beckoned Cubillos to San Antonio. 

“This is the place to you want to live,” he said. “This is where the vibe is.”  

“Sometimes when I design, I build the house from the ground up. Sometimes they bring in the doors. Sometimes they bring in the chimney."

  Cubillos started his singing career with The Latin Breed, a popular Tejano band that mixed traditional Mexican repertoire with jazz and R&B. But he left the stage to study graphic design at the Art Institute of Houston.

One day, he approached Joe Hernandez who was the lead Tejano singer for a band called Little Joe and la Familia. They were big at the time. Cubillos showed Hernandez a couple of concept album covers he designed for the band. Weeks later, Cubillos was sketching album covers for "No Quiero Más Amar," Little Joe and la Familia’s first international record.

“That’s where everything started,” Cubillos said.  

Cubillos described albums as little homes as he showed off his concept designs for a particularly significant one for his career and for the future of the musicians he was designing for at the time  — Selena y Los Dinos. The 1989 album was titled “Selena.”

“Records are (like) a house and the album cover is the door,” he said.

Cubillos designed Selena’s album cover while working full time for an advertising agency. The photo album cover depicts the Tejano music queen standing at the top of a cliff looking at a bright sky just before sunset.

“It’s just perfect,” Cubillos said looking at the album cover. “I didn’t have to do anything, I didn’t have to touch it! Selena’s skin is coming out so beautiful!”

Even more momentous for Cubillos is that he had a hand, literally, in designing Selena’s signature at the bottom of the album cover. He said when Selena became famous, she started to use this signature as her own.

“This is my own hand script I dropped in there, which later became her icon,” Cubillos said. “And that’s how it lives today.”

If records are like little homes, and album covers are its doors, then, all the records this 60-year-old graphic designer has created are similar to a life’s map.

After decades of doing marketing for Latino audiences and creating album covers for musicians, a Mexican pop artist appeared in Cubillos’ life.

“The Juan Gabriel story is a story of destiny,” he said.

Juan Gabriel is a superstar in the Latino music industry, and he, as Selena in 1989, was trying to reinvent himself.

At the time Mexican music producer Gustavo Farías was working on Gabriel’s then-recent record "Los Dúos," a duet album. He invited Cubillos to design the cover.

“Sometimes when I design, I build the house from the ground up. Sometimes they bring in the doors. Sometimes they bring in the chimney,” Cubillos said.

In this case, Farías and his team gave Cubillos the door and the chimney – in the other words, the concept and the photos. Cubillos worked his magic just as he did when he worked on Selena’s.

Now, that Cubillos is working for Universal Music, he reflects on whether his style has become classic. He knows he can be trendy but he questions whether he really wants to be. 

“I just want to be who I am,” he said.

Ruben's life in 10 songs

Cubillos love for Tejano music has never gone away. Here are his top ten Tejano songs that define him, his passion and life.

“These songs live on my radar,” he said.

The 2016 project at KUT can be found at nextgenradiotexas.org

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