Since the end of the 19 th Century songs composed by our                     first troubadours began to appear.   They used, developed                     and even created some musical forms or genres within the                     general song framework.   One of them was the bolero .   With                     the New Trova  this term came out once more, though                     now with its own characteristics to designate a music always                     linked to texts and eminently conceived to be sang and through                     its singing, express feelings and even criteria and concepts                     concerning life in general and love in particular.
The song                     entitled "Tristezas" by Pepe Sánchez was                     the first Cuban bolero registered by history which                     had nothing to do with the so-called "Spanish bolero " present                     in Cuba since the 18 th Century together with other manifestations                     of similar origin as the fandangos and the seguidillas  among                     others. It is not even a modification of the former.
The first boleros  adopted                     the song form, or structure, with two musical parts or periods,                     almost always separated by an instrumental part and incorporating                     to the guitar accompaniment -and,                     occasionally to the melody- a rhythmic element which is characteristic                     in our music:   the Cuban cinquillo , also                     adopted by the danzón  and being one of its                     features, in the beating of the pailas.
The most important composers of the Traditional Trova  composed                     a great number of pieces using this rhythm.   During                     this stage, including the first decades of the 20 th Century,                     this genre had its own physiognomy, mainly because of the cinquillo ,                     thus emerging a rhythm that easily merged both the Hispanic                     and African elements.   We can certainly speak of a                     traditional or troubadour-like bolero  different                     from the one internationally disseminated and acknowledged                     some years later.  
During the boom of son and the apogee of danzón ,                     this traditional bolero  was partially relegated                     for it was not eminently for dancing and was not assimilated                     by the new sonero septets and sextets nor by the                     typical orchestras or charangas.  Nevertheless,                     we must clarify the fact that during those years, there was                     still a development of the work of those Cuban troubadours                     who resorted to their guitar and voices to interpret some                     of the most beautiful songs in our history, many of them boleros .
At                     that time, when dancing manifestations prevailed, some composers,                     not guitar players but pianists, began composing boleros  that                     gradually managed to be different from the previous ones.   The                     piano, with more expressive possibilities than the guitar,                     while maintaining the cinquillo  as a rhythmic figure                     in the left hand, allowed the introduction of melodic turns                     of another kind that finally prevailed over the rigid rhythm                     of the cinquillo  until it finally disappeared.   Likewise,                     the musicalization of verses also contributed with its disappearance,                     since it was better to have more freedom without any strong                     linkage to a rhythmic base.   'Aquellos ojos verdes'                     is the song that summarizes this process, with music by Nilo                     Menéndez and text by Adolfo Utrera.  
The paternity -o                       better to say the nationality- of this bolero  has                       been questioned.   More specifically in Mexico it has                       been and is still a widely disseminated and enjoyed rhythm                       and it is said that this country is the promoter of this                       musical manifestation.   What is unquestionable is that                       some Mexican composers, like Agustín Lara or María                       Grever, have contributed a lot with this genre and with its                       wide international acceptance.   Undoubtedly, their                       work has influenced Cuban composers who came afterwards.
But                       obviously the boleros   of our Cuban composers                       have also influenced considerably the work of Mexican authors                       and authors from other countries.
We cannot speak of boleros  without                         mentioning their content, evidently loving and intimate                       verses.   The                         most loving feelings or disappointments are declared or expressed                         in a straight and simple language whose texts are sometimes                         repetitive or extremely simplistic.   The bolero ,                         after becoming a dancing piece, was performed by orchestras                         of every kind and was an absolute success since it allows                         the couple to take a breath, dancing more slowly, between                         two active pieces.
It is impossible to mention some of the                       most important bolero authors                         without any omission.   However, the works of René Touzet,                         Juan Bruno Tarraza, Orlando de la Rosa, Felo Bergaza, Pedro                         Junco, Luis Marquetti, Isolina Carrillo and Juan Arrondo,                         are among others unfairly omitted for the sake of   reducing                         this interminable list.   We must never forget musicians                         like Adolfo Guzmán, Ernesto Lecuona, Gonzalo Roig                         or Jorge Anckerman, who composed songs closer to the                         lyric genre, as well as beautiful boleros  or songs                         that were finally performed as boleros.
Another moment of great importance for this musical                         genre was the emergence of the feeling  -or filin  in                         Cuban language.   Equally intimate, the filin  was                         a movement that taking the song as starting point influenced                         in almost all the Cuban popular music.   Its promoters                         returned to the guitar to compose under the influence                         of the blues and the jazz though rooted too in the trova  tradition.   The filin  movement,                         together with its creators, grouped some of the best                         and more updated arrangers and musicians of that time                         who joined the troubadours in their informal performances.   Many                         of the filin  songs were interpreted as boleros  with                         excellent orchestral arrangements including vanguard                         concepts and harmonization.
Together with José Antonio Méndez                         and César                         Portillo de la Luz, the most renowned, we should also mention                         Martha Valdés, Ángel Díaz, Ñico                         Rojas, Rosendo Ruiz Quevedo, Tania Castellanos and 'Niño                         Rivera', among the most important creators of this movement.
The                       most outstanding interpreters of the Cuban popular music                       included the bolero  in their repertoires.   The                         greatest interpreters of this musical genre included Benny                         Moré, Panchito Riset, Ñico Membiela, Orlando                         Vallejo, Olga Guillot, Fernando Álvarez, Gina León,                         Tito Gómez, Roberto Faz, Pacho Alonso, Roberto Sánchez,                         Omara Portuondo, Elena Burke and many others.
The bolero  had -and still has- a sort of fusion with                       other Cuban rhythms.   The bolero-son , the bolero-mambo ,                       the bolero-chá  are some examples of the                       link between the bolero  and these genres.   Initially,                       a theme was taken, originally conceived as a bolero  and                       then rhythmic elements from other genres were added to                       it.   But                       works previously thought, previously conceived were originally                     composed from the fusion among musical genres.