Celina González: Queen of the Cuban Punto
The voice of Cuba's country music and the anthem "¡Que Viva Changó!"
Pioneers3 min read2 citations
While Havana exported the son and the mambo to the world, the Cuban countryside kept its own music: the punto guajiro and the guajira, the guitar-borne songs of the peasant guajiro, their verses spun from the décima, the ten-line poetic form of rural Cuba. Its reigning queen — and the performer who carried that campesino tradition from the campo onto record, radio, and screen — was Celina González, whose voice fused the peasant song with the devotions of Afro-Cuban Santería and made it a music of national pride.[1]
A singer from Matanzas to the east
Celina González Zamora was born on 16 March 1929 in Jovellanos, in the western province of Matanzas, and made the música campesina — the traditional music of the Cuban countryside — her life's work.[1] Her earliest repertoire drew on the old European-derived guajiro song of the peasantry, its lyrics built on the poetics of the décima. At sixteen she went to Santiago de Cuba, at the eastern end of the island, and there met Reutilio Domínguez (born 1921), a guitarist and singer who became her musical partner and her husband.[1] From 1948 the duo worked alongside the celebrated guitarist-singer Ñico Saquito, and their fame spread across radio, film, and television; they appeared in New York alongside Beny Moré and Barbarito Diez. The partnership endured until Domínguez's death in Guantánamo in 1971 and produced the defining recordings of the punto guajiro.[1]
"¡Que Viva Changó!"
Together, González and Domínguez wrote the songs that carried her name across the island. "A Santa Bárbara" — known everywhere by its refrain "¡Que Viva Changó!" — became her signature: a chant rooted in the Regla de Osha (Santería) that fused Cuba's rural song with its Afro-Cuban religion.[1][2] Her recording was a hit and entered the permanent repertoire of Cuban music — so beloved that Celia Cruz later cut her own version.[1] A second composition, "Yo Soy El Punto Cubano", became an anthem of national identity and a hit in many countries.[1] Such songs were characteristic of the duo, who threaded the prayers, names, and words of Santería through a repertoire that ranged across the guajira, the guaracha, and the punto cubano.
A soloist and a lifelong devotion
A devoted practitioner of Santería herself, González did more than any other performer to carry Cuba's devotions and its country music to a mass audience, on record and over the airwaves. In 1964 the duo ceased performing together and she continued as a soloist; in later years she sang alongside her son Lázaro, usually backed by the conjunto Campo Alegre. She died on 4 February 2015.[1]
Why she matters
Celina González matters because she gave Cuba's rural and Afro-Cuban traditions a voice that reached the whole nation and the world beyond it. Where the son rose from the eastern countryside and the guajira idealized peasant life, Celina turned the punto cubano into a music of pride and devotion for the entire island.[2] As the Reina del Punto Cubano — Queen of the Cuban Punto — she stands among the essential figures of Cuban song: the woman who taught the world to cry "¡Que Viva Changó!"
References
- 1.Celina González — Wikipedia, 2026
- 2.Cuba and Its Music: From the First Drums to the Mambo — Ned Sublette, Chicago Review Press, 2004
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Bailar Editorial Team. (2026). Celina González: Queen of the Cuban Punto. Bailar Biblioteca. Retrieved July 5, 2026, from https://getbailar.com/biblioteca/encyclopedia/son-cubano/pioneers/celina-gonzalez
Bailar Editorial Team. “Celina González: Queen of the Cuban Punto.” Bailar Biblioteca, 2026, getbailar.com/biblioteca/encyclopedia/son-cubano/pioneers/celina-gonzalez. Accessed 5 July 2026.
Bailar Editorial Team. “Celina González: Queen of the Cuban Punto.” Bailar Biblioteca. Accessed July 5, 2026. https://getbailar.com/biblioteca/encyclopedia/son-cubano/pioneers/celina-gonzalez.
@misc{bailar-son-cubano-celina-gonzalez, author = {{Bailar Editorial Team}}, title = {{Celina González: Queen of the Cuban Punto}}, year = {2026}, howpublished = {Bailar Biblioteca}, url = {https://getbailar.com/biblioteca/encyclopedia/son-cubano/pioneers/celina-gonzalez}, note = {Accessed: 2026-07-05} }
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