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Payada in a pulpería by Carlos Morel Juan Arroyo, Argentine payador, c. 1870 Payador playing in his rancho, c. 1890s. The payada is a folk music tradition native to Argentina, Uruguay, southern Brazil, and south Paraguay as part of the Gaucho culture and Gaucho literature. In Chile it is called paya and performed by huasos.
Cover to Cantares Criollos, a book that compiles songs by Gabino Ezeiza, published in 1886. There are those who consider that Ezeiza was the one who introduced the milonga rhythm to payada, [14] and its popularity caused other payadores to spread it to other areas of Argentina, Uruguay, and Brazil (on all in the south of this country).
The most distinctive music of Uruguay is to be found in the tango and candombe; both genres have been recognized by UNESCO as an Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. . Uruguayan music includes a number of local musical forms such as murga, a form of musical theatre, and milonga, a folk guitar and song form deriving from Spanish and italian traditions and related to similar forms found in ...
In this way, the chacarera would have large African contributions, as would the malambo (which is seen in the lively zapateo, sharing African roots with the small Afro-Peruvian zapateos), the tango, [33] [34] the payada, the gato (a rhythm that greatly influenced the chacarera), the Pampean milonga campera and the milonga ciudadana dance. [35]
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Education and culture ministers of Uruguay (19 P) Culture in Montevideo (2 C, 3 P) N. National symbols of Uruguay (2 C, 9 P) ... Payada; T. Truco; U. Uruguayan units ...
"Society of the Snow" is earning raves for its a ccurate depiction of the terrifying 1972 plane crash in the Andes mountains that involved a Uruguayan rugby team.. The new Netflix drama, directed ...
In Argentina, the word Tango seems to have first been used in the 1890s. In 1902, the Teatro Opera started to include tango in their balls. [11] Initially tango was just one of the many dances practiced locally, but it soon became popular throughout society, as theatres and street barrel organs spread it from the suburbs to the working-class slums, which were packed with hundreds of thousands ...