B6 EZ RE THE WASHINGTON POST.FRIDAY, AUGUST 23 , 2019
wood.
By 8, Celso was dumpster-div-
ing outside mansions and super-
markets, collecting fruit that he
and an older man washed and
resold in their neighborhood, ac-
cording to the Mexican newspa-
per Milenio. He later worked as a
smelter, a tortilla dealer, a corn
miller and an upholsterer.
With songs such as “Reina de
Cumbias,” “El Tren” and “Como el
Viento,” Mr. Piña reached an
increasingly international audi-
ence, performing almost every-
where but Oceania. He was fea-
tured on the Gloria Trevi pop
song “Sufran con lo Que Yo Gozo”
and planning a record with DJ
and producer Camilo Lara, al-
though he said he wanted to
retire soon, before his faculties
diminished — but only after per-
forming in Australia.
“Celso is the last of the idols of
the people, perhaps the only one
who was loved and respected by
all: the rockers, the pop fans, the
rappers, the electronic music
producers,” Lara told El País on
Wednesday. “He experimented
with everyone — that’s why his
legacy is so vast. He was more
punk than any punk, the rebel
and savage that many rockers
wanted to be.”
Mr. Piña had five children and
continued to perform with his
three brothers, even as the rest of
his lineup shifted. “Family should
always be united, at least that’s
what Mamá would tell us,” he told
the American-Statesman in 2013.
Complete information on survi-
vors was not immediately avail-
able.
In interviews, Mr. Piña re-
counted the difficulties he faced
early in his career, including a
restrictive recording contract
that led him to go silent for
several years until he was able to
sign with a new label. Listeners in
the 1970s often asked why he
played music that no one else
played, let alone heard on the
radio.
But almost always, Mr. Piña’s
response was the same. “Why am
I going to play the same thing
that everyone else plays?” he said,
according to Osorno. “Music is
music.”
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perfect compromise between the
worlds of roots and rock, two
generations, classes and societies
playing together with mutual re-
spect and making music that
sounds completely organic and
unforced,” wrote a reviewer for
Sing Out!, an American folk mag-
azine. “There is none of the
self-consciousness or pretension
that such fusions tend to have
north of the Rio Grande.... I
wish I could describe it better,
but there is nothing else that
sounds like this. A true master-
piece.”
Celso Piña Arvizu was born in
Monterrey on April 6, 1953. His
father worked at the children’s
hospital where Mr. Piña was later
hired, and he made instruments
for his children out of iron and
approached by Julián Villarreal,
a former bassist with the genre-
blending Monterrey rock group
El Gran Silencio.
“How do you feel about doing
something kind of crazy, funky?”
Villarreal asked him.
Their conversation inspired
Mr. Piña’s 2001 record “Barrio
Bravo,” which received a Latin
Grammy nomination and fea-
tured contributions from Mexi-
can artists including Café Tacu-
ba, Control Machete and Santa
Sabina. The album opened with
“Cumbia Sobre el Rio,” later fea-
tured on the soundtrack of direc-
tor Alejandro González Iñárritu’s
film “Babel,” and spawned con-
cert tours across Europe and the
Americas.
“In a way, the album is a
according to Osorno, until a 2004
breakthrough — when Gabriel
García Márquez, the Nobel Prize-
winning novelist, was filmed
dancing to Mr. Piña’s accordion,
drum and guacharaca band dur-
ing an event at the Monterrey
Museum of Contemporary Art.
The moment drew wide coverage
in the Mexican press and seemed
to solidify Mr. Piña’s stature in
the country. “The accordion reb-
el,” as he was long known, was
now mainstream.
By then, however, Mr. Piña had
stepped far outside the bounds of
traditional cumbia, reinventing
his band, Celso Piña y su Ronda
Bogotá, as an avatar of Latin
American musical fusion. In an
interview with the Austin Ameri-
can-Statesman, he recalled being
the city’s traditional music dur-
ing the 1980s, according to a New
York Times account by Mexican
journalist Diego Enrique Osorno.
Rooted in a country thousands
of miles away, Mr. Piña’s songs
were initially scorned by local
elites and authorities, with con-
certs sometimes shut down by
the police. “My music provoked
the madness of the people,” he
said last year. They also spurred
something like peace: Amid re-
ports that rival gangs in Monter-
rey stopped fighting only at the
sound of cumbia, the writer Car-
los Monsiváis dubbed Mr. Piña
“the accordionist of Hamelin,” a
reference to the Pied Piper whose
music lured away rats.
Nonetheless, he received scant
airplay or newspaper coverage,
BY HARRISON SMITH
Celso Piña, a self-taught Mexi-
can accordionist who turned his
hometown of Monterrey into an
unlikely oasis for cumbia, the
Colombian dance music, then
became a Latin music superstar
with his fusion of rock, reggae,
ska, hip-hop, tropical music and
Northern Mexican rhythms, died
Aug. 21 at a hospital in Monter-
rey. He was 66.
The cause was a heart attack,
his record label, La Tuna Group,
said in a statement. Mr. Piña was
in the midst of a North American
tour, with a performance this
past Saturday in Milwaukee and
an Aug. 30 show scheduled in
Arlington, Tex.
In what was apparently his last
tweet, he wrote Wednesday in
Spanish: “There is no one who
resists cumbia.” The tweet in-
cluded a video of one of his
biggest hits, the semi-autobiog-
raphical dance tune “Cumbia So-
bre el Rio,” in which Mr. Piña’s
group sings in Spanish: “From
Monterrey, a Colombian cumbia
for everyone.”
The truth of that statement
was almost unimaginable when
Mr. Piña began performing in the
1970s, on a two-row accordion his
father had once given him as a
gift. In Monterrey, a sun-baked
industrial city in the foothills of
the Sierra Madre Oriental, polka
and waltz tunes had long domi-
nated clubs, dance halls and
neighborhood parties, brought
by German and Czech immi-
grants a century before.
But Mr. Piña found himself
enchanted by the music of Co-
lombian accordionists Aníbal Ve-
lásquez and Alfredo Gutiérrez,
masters of that country’s val-
lenato and cumbia folk styles.
Listening to their records on
repeat, he spent three months
learning his first song — then was
told by his father he needed three
more months of rehearsal.
With his brothers Eduardo,
Rubén and Enrique, he serenad-
ed girls in his Monterrey neigh-
borhood and, at 20, left his ad-
ministrative position at a chil-
dren’s hospital to become a full-
time musician. Slowly, cumbia
began to take hold, elbowing out
obituaries
CELSO PIÑA, 66
Cumbia star, ‘accordion rebel’ challenged musical norms
TOMAS BRAVO/REUTERS
Celso Piña in his hometown of Monterrey, Mexico, in 2008. Mr. Piña was inspired by Colombian cumbia, and his early take on the style
drew scorn in Northern Mexico, with his concerts sometimes shut down. “My music provoked the madness of the people,” he said.
OF NOTE
Obituaries of residents from the
District, Maryland and Northern
Virginia.
James Lombardi,
lawyer and judge
James Lombardi, 83, a Prince
George’s County judge, former
member of the Maryland House
of Delegates and a lawyer in
private practice in Upper Marl-
boro, Md., from 1970 to 1997, died
June 11 at his home in Annapolis.
The cause was complications
from a stroke and amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis, said a daughter,
Joyce Lombardi.
Judge Lombardi was born in
Philadelphia and grew up in Bal-
timore. He was a lawyer in the
State’s Attorney’s office for Prince
George’s County from 1965 to
1970, then a partner in the law
firm of Lombardi, Powers & Am-
ster.
While in private law practice,
he served from 1971 to 1975 as a
Prince George’s County Democrat
in the Maryland House of Del-
egates. He was an Orphans Court
Judge, a federal magistrate and
did arbitrations and mediations.
He was a Maryland Circuit Court
judge from 1997 to 2006, when he
retired. In retirement he contin-
ued to hear cases until 2018.
Edward Forgotson,
federal official, lawyer
Edward Forgotson, 85, a law-
yer who held positions with fed-
eral agencies and in the White
House and later had a law prac-
tice focused on oil and natural
gas policy, died July 4 at a hospi-
tal in Miami Beach. The cause
was respiratory failure, said his
wife, Ann Forgotson.
Mr. Forgotson was born in
Albuquerque and grew up in
Shreveport, La. After teaching at
the UCLA law school and con-
ducting research on health policy
at the Rand Corp. in California,
Mr. Forgotson established a law
firm in Washington and was in-
strumental in lobbying for pas-
sage of the Natural Gas Policy Act
of 1978. During the 1980s, he was
a fundraiser for the Republican
Party. He moved to Santa Fe,
N.M., in 1992 and to Miami Beach
in 2008.
John Merrill,
Pentagon policy writer
John Merrill, 72, a senior policy
researcher and writer at the Pen-
tagon who specialized in Latin
America over a 37-year career,
died June 10 at his home in
Keizer, Ore. The cause was can-
cer, said his former wife, Cheryl
Merrill.
Mr. Merrill was born in San
Mateo, Calif. He was a deputy
director of the Defense Depart-
ment’s Haiti task force in the
mid-1990s and retired in 2012.
Charles Church,
physicist, research director
Charles Church, 90, a physicist
and research director for the
Army Department, died July 7 at
his home in Savannah, Ga. He
had heart ailments, said his
daughter, Jane Horvath.
Dr. Church was born in Phoe-
nix and was a researcher for
Westinghouse and the Defense
Advanced Research Projects
Agency before joining the Army’s
civilian research and develop-
ment unit as a physicist in 1975.
He led several research and labo-
ratory units before serving as
director of Army research from
1995 until his retirement in 1997.
Before moving to Savannah, Dr.
Church lived in Alexandria, Va.,
where he was active in scouting
and the Fort Hunt High School
boosters club.
Edward Killham,
Foreign Service officer
Edward Killham, 93, a senior
Foreign Service officer who
served from 1979 to 1982 as depu-
ty chief of mission of the U.S.
Embassy in Brussels and retired
in 1987 with the rank of minister
counselor, died July 7 at a resi-
dence for seniors in Bethesda,
Md. The cause was pneumonia,
said a daughter, Amanda Davis.
Mr. Killham, a Chicago native,
joined the Foreign Service in
- In the 1970s, he served as
deputy assistant secretary gener-
al on the international staff for
the North Atlantic Treaty Organi-
zation, special adviser to the U.S.
delegation to strategic arms limi-
tation talks in Geneva, and on the
U.S. delegation to mutual bal-
anced force reduction talks in
Vienna. He wrote a book, “The
Nordic Way: A Path to Baltic
Equilibrium” (1993).
Pamela Coleman Jefferson,
government employee
Pamela Coleman Jefferson, 72,
who spent 34 years at the Bureau
of Engraving and Printing as a
security processor — examining
money for defects — before retir-
ing in 2002, died July 3 at her
home in Rio Rancho, N.M. The
cause was complications from
dementia, said a daughter, An-
gela Shanks.
Mrs. Jefferson was born Pam-
ela Payne in Washington. She
moved to Edgewater, Fla., in 2003
from the District and moved to
New Mexico in 2014.
— From staff reports
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