Identidades in English No 4, December 2014 | Page 70

ists and projects must constantly reinvent ourselves and change our work and promotional strategies; on the upside, this makes us evolve and grow as independent creators. There is much to do, and if we focus on what we want, artists can truly come together, overcome the obstacles, and achieve important changes without having to wait for an invitation to the negotiating table every now and then at the Cuban Rap Agency, where directors - comfortable in their authority, who care nothing at all about Hip Hop - limit themselves to put off issues which they haven’t the slightest interest to resolve or promote. We have to keep working; we have to keep struggling against that invisible wall that tells that we can’t. We must roll up our sleeves and keep going forward. Maykel Xtremo. Photo: Adolfo Cabrera Topics about social issues and racial prejudices, totalitarianism and manipulation are censored. The artists and projects that promote these, or are committed to changes and a critique of the government and its mistaken policies, receive phone calls and visits from and are arrested by State Security. In addition to this policy of vigilance, government institutions and officialdom control the performance spaces, national record companies, and most of the promotional media. Independent art- 70 Raudel and David