At the end of the 60´s, some young authors                     resorted to guitar compositions to praise love,   their                     country daily life and life in general. Already in those                     first songs, in those texts --whether personal or epic, philosophical                     or colloquial, but always highly lyrical--, it was obvious                     that something new was taking place in Cuban music, especially                     concerning the song.  
At that time, and since the victory                     of the Cuban Revolution in 1959, deep social transformations                     were continously taking place in the Island; Cubans were                     facing a new life and all that had a deep impact on artistic                     creation. The Nueva Trova  movement emerged from                     these transformations, not only in its content, but also                     in its aesthetic nature and stances adopted by artists in                     society.  
In the second half of the 60´s, some                     of the dancing genres of popular music, that since the 20´s   had                     been very popular, started to decline. Youngsters, in general,                     were fascinated by the rock phenomenon, thus considering                     the old son  and cha-cha-chá singers                     and orchestras out of fashion.
This situation did not spare                     the songs realm. The bolero  also declined and many                     of its interpreters began to sing "international" songs for the sake                     of a very doubtful modernity.   These songs, which arrived                     in our country in large numbers, were generally "constructed" on                     simple musical patterns - so as to 'hit' the listener - and                     had really awful texts. Many Cuban authors also began composing                     under these patterns with the support of media promotion.
The                     first songs of the Nueva Trova ,                     meant a total break. From Mis 22 años , by                     Pablo Milanés to the first songs by Silvio Rodríguez,                     different elements and the evident attempt by the authors                     showed when they hightened the artistic level of songs in                     front of other songs -- mainly foreign -- prevailing in the                     country.  
We are particularly referring to the work of                     the Cuban youngest authors and musicians at that time, because                     for example, even though the "feeling" representatives were                     still producing excellent songs, they did not constitute                     the prevailing fashion among Cuban youth. The Nueva Trova  is                     based on a fundamental instrument in the Cuban music: the                     guitar and it was a movement whose main protagonist was the                     singer-composer, the so-called cantautor .                     The guitar, the lyrism of the texts, the rejection to any "commercial" form                     of creativity, as well as the praising of the mother country,                     link the Nueva Trova to the Cuban troubadour tradition                     which started at the end of the 19th century and continued                     through the 40´s with the ' filin '   movement.