Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Clásicos de la Provincia is the sixth album by Colombian singer-songwriter Carlos Vives.Released in Colombia in late 1993, and internationally on February 22, 1994, the album is a collection of Colombian vallenato classics.
The Guitar Trio is a reunion album by Al Di Meola, Paco de Lucía and John McLaughlin, released in 1996 after 13 years without playing together.This 1996 effort has three originals apiece from McLaughlin and Di Meola, two by de Lucía and a McLaughlin-Di Meola duet on "Manhã de Carnaval".
música colombiana – Colombian music, formerly understood to refer to música andina in the 19th and early 20th century, when that style was perceived as a national music; baile de cuota – A type of dance party in Cali's working-class neighborhoods during the mid-20th century [1] cuatro – A small guitar, used in llanera [2]
The music event Rock al Parque celebrated yearly in Bogotá is the largest free rock festival in Latin America; around 100 bands playing their music along 3 days and 400,000 people in attendance. Currently, Doctor Krápula , a rock band with strong ska influences that is known for making covers of traditional Latin American songs, enjoys great ...
The piqueria vallenata is a type of typical musical showdown Colombian Caribbean folklore and Vallenato. As in the contrapunteo Joropo burrowing, or trova paisa within the music, litigants demonstrate their improvisational skills in building verses that challenge their opponent. This type of musical confrontation arose as a result of chance ...
Andrés Landero was born in San Jacinto, Bolívar, on February 4, 1932. [2] His father was the gaitero Isaías Guerra and his mother Rosalba Landero. [3] As a boy, he visited the mountains and learned the sounds of nature.
Method. Preheat the oven to 375°F. Coat a large baking dish with cooking spray. Place the chicken on a clean work surface. Cut 4 (1/4-inch-thick) slices from the lemon and stuff the remaining ...
Within Colombia, the term Música popular (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈmusika popuˈlaɾ], 'popular music') is often used to refer to a folk music genre originated between the 1930s and 1940s in the Paisa Region, in the northwestern part of the country, influenced primarily by Mexican folk music, as well as Argentinian, Ecuadorian and Peruvian to a lesser degree. [1]