73rd anniversary of the birth of a great: Luis "Terror" Días

On June 21, 1952, in the warm heart of Bonao, a child was born with the rhythms of the earth beating in his blood. Luis Días Portorreal, whom the world would later know as "El Terror". From the beginning, he was a soul touched by music, as his father taught him the first chords on a tres, while his mother gave him the cadence of the salves she sang with a sweet and ancestral voice. With them he learned that music is not read first, it is felt.
73 aniversario del nacimiento de un grande: Luis "Terror" Dias
Luis "El Terror" Díaz
From a very young age, he was seen walking the roads of the Dominican Republic on foot, between towns, neighborhoods, and sugarcane fields. He not only listened to the voice of the people, he slept with them. It was there, among guitars, drums, and peasant voices, that the art that would later give him a privileged place in the national soul germinated. At 16, he founded his first band, Los Chonnys, with which he played rock and roll around Bonao. Shortly after, he moved to Santo Domingo to study Psychology at the Autonomous University of Santo Domingo (UASD), but his guitar always went with him, even during his university naps. It wasn't long before that musical passion led him to become part of Convite, a musical group that was revolutionary in artistic and ideological terms, promoted by the sociologist Dagoberto Tejeda. Convite not only played music, it rescued collective memory. They went to the fields, listened, investigated, slept in houses made of wood and zinc, and returned with authentic sounds that fused the roots with the guitar.

Luis didn't just play. He thought. He wrote. He rebelled. He had daring ideas and a sensitivity that allowed him to turn the pain, poverty, and joy of the people into electrifying verses. Thus were born songs like Obrero, acepta mi mano, which became an anthem of protest song in 1974.

In 1980, he emigrated to New York, where he taught traditional Dominican music at the American Museum of Natural History. There he soaked up jazz, the punk scene, and avant-garde currents, adding new tools to his already exuberant musical palette. Two years later he returned to the country and gave birth to the project that would forever change the urban Creole sound: Transporte Urbano, an unclassifiable band that mixed bachata, merengue, rock, jazz, and even heavy metal.

The Terror That Made the Nation Dance

It was the voice of the average Dominican, the soundtrack of the capital's chaos, discouragement, and euphoria. It was then that he composed Baila en la calle, the merengue that would become a carnival anthem and that still today makes us move our feet and raise our arms. But his work did not stop there. His pen gave memorable songs to artists like Sergio Vargas (Marola, Las Vampiras), Sonia Silvestre (El guachimán), Fernando Villalona, Kaki Vargas, Rubby Pérez, Dioni Fernández and even Marc Anthony, who sang Si he de morir. Luis Días was more than a musician. He was a sound alchemist. A man who saw in bachata what no one wanted to see: the Dominican blues. When it was still despised by the elite, he wrote that one day it would be "the triumph of misery and poverty." He said it with chords, not with words. And he was right. His free, fusion, and wild style led him to record memorable albums such as Luis Terror Días (1984), El Accidente (1998), and to compose for cinema, theater, and literature. He published poetry (Tránsito entre Guácaras), set award-winning short films to music, and was an essential part of the Dominican cultural awakening of the 80s and 90s. In 2004, it was declared Cultural Heritage of the Dominican Nation. He received tributes from the Ministry of Culture, the Senate, Acroarte, and even has a carnival award named after him. But, above all, he has the respect of the people, who still sing his verses in the streets, and the eternal gratitude of a homeland that saw him leave on December 8, 2009, with a heart attack, but not without first letting himself be pierced by his hurricane of talent.
Luis Días no se fue. Sigue aquí. En cada tambora, en cada coro callejero, en cada nota de guitarra con amargue. Porque cuando un artista logra convertir la historia de un pueblo en canción, nunca muere. Solo se transforma en música.

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