Xenia Rubinos Explained

Xenia Rubinos
Birth Name:Xenia Rubinos
Birth Date:July 24, 1985
Origin:Hartford, Connecticut, United States
Genre:Funk-rock, R&B, jazz-funk
Occupation:Musician, songwriter, record producer
Years Active:2013 - present
Label:ANTI-
Associated Acts:Sammus, Marco Buccelli, Olga Bell

Xenia Rubinos (born July 24, 1985) is an American singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist.

Background and early life

Xenia Rubinos was born in Hartford, Connecticut in 1985 to a Puerto Rican mother and a Cuban father.[1] She studied jazz composition at the Berklee College of Music.[2] She spent most of her 20s acting as the primary caregiver for her father as he dealt with a degenerative illness, which inspired her song "Black Stars."[3] She has lived in Brooklyn since 2006.

Career

Her album Black Terry Cat was released to critical acclaim and was named the 11th best album of 2016 by NPR.[4]

Music

Rubinos' early music influences include composers like Prokofiev and Ravel,[5] as her father was a fan of classical music and opera.[3] Salsa, rumba and merengue, including releases by Fania Records, were popular in her house while growing up.[6] Later, she became enthralled with hip-hop, R&B and Miles Davis in particular, which led her to study jazz at the Berklee College of Music.

She is inspired by her Latin American heritage and Santería practices. She is also inspired by the Black Lives Matter movement,[3] and discusses her experiences as a woman of color in her songs, but she sees her music as broader than the category of protest music.

Rubinos' music is not easily categorized, as she crosses many genres in both her lyrics and her sound.[7] [8] [9]

Discography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Xenia Rubinos: 'I'm saying things about being a brown girl in America' . The Guardian. October 24, 2016. Laura. Snapes.
  2. Web site: Articulate: Xenia Rubinos . PBS .
  3. Web site: In 'Black Stars,' Xenia Rubinos Memorializes Many Lives In One . NPR . July 3, 2016 .
  4. Web site: 5 December 2016. NPR Music: Best 50 Albums of 2016. NPR.
  5. Web site: Unboxed: Genre-Hopping with Xenia Rubinos . The Village Voice . May 31, 2016 . Isabela . Raygoza.
  6. Web site: Brown . Helen . Xenia Rubinos, Black Terry Cat, review: 'the sound of the summer' . The Telegraph . May 2, 2019 . June 17, 2016.
  7. Web site: Xenia Rubinos: Adventures in Syncopation . NPR . April 23, 2013 . Rachel . Martin .
  8. Web site: Album Review Black Terry Cat . Now Toronto. July 13, 2016. Chaka. Grier.
  9. Web site: Magic Trix Review . Pitchfork . May 24, 2013 . Laura. Snapes.