Vallenato 2004-??-??
Exitos Vallentos, various, Colombia
Set 1
Escalona - Grupo Barracos
Ivan Villazan - No Te Ruego Mas
Lisandro Mesa - Boquita Colorada
Rafael Escalona - El Playonero
Grupo Penaranda - El Platanito
Calixto Ochoa - Divino
Betos - Dejenme Quererla
Alejo Duran - Joselina
Alejo Duran -El Caballo Pechichon
Jena Carlos Centeno -Victor Reyes - Que Me Perdone
Alejo Duran - El Mejoral
Alejo Duran - Cero Treinta Y Nueve
Alejo Duran - Alicia Dorada
Zuleta - Juana
Calixto Ochoa - Muriendo Lentamente
Alejo Duran - guepa Je
Ivan Villazon & Saul Lallemand - El Pajaro Herido
Calixto Ochoa - Los Sabanales
Alejo Duran - Palmito
Ivan Villazan - No Te Ruego Mas
Lisandro Mesa - Boquita Colorada
Rafael Escalona - El Playonero
Grupo Penaranda - El Platanito
Calixto Ochoa - Divino
Betos - Dejenme Quererla
Alejo Duran - Joselina
Alejo Duran -El Caballo Pechichon
Jena Carlos Centeno -Victor Reyes - Que Me Perdone
Alejo Duran - El Mejoral
Alejo Duran - Cero Treinta Y Nueve
Alejo Duran - Alicia Dorada
Zuleta - Juana
Calixto Ochoa - Muriendo Lentamente
Alejo Duran - guepa Je
Ivan Villazon & Saul Lallemand - El Pajaro Herido
Calixto Ochoa - Los Sabanales
Alejo Duran - Palmito
Set 2
Set 3
Comment
Vine on Latin American Live Music: http://launch.groups.yahoo.com/group/latinamericanlivemusic/
Exitos Vallentos: all of these have long been out of print and are old Vallenato songs. A Compilation of Vallenato
favorites.
Vallenato comes from Colombia?s northern coast . The name is derivated from "Valledupar", the city where it became popular. Valledupar comes from Valle de Upar (Valle = Valley, Upar = A river that crosses this city).
The origins of vallenato are:
- The folkloric Cumbia, using only percussion (Alegre, llamador, bombo, guache, maracas de totumo) and the rustical Gaita flutes (not the one from Schottland!) of the Aruaco Indians from the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta but used mainly in the Departamentos Bolivar, Sucre and C?rdoba, or the "Flauta de Millo" used mainly in Soledad and Barranquilla.
- Later, the "m?sica sabanera", with guitars and tiple (12 strings in 4 groups of three with similar sound to the cuban "tres").
Originally, Vallenato was played using only accordion, guacharaca (something like the g?iro but made of the boughs of the corozo palm), caja vallenata (a drum, a little bigger than a bongo using an x-ray sheet instead of the leather pad) and vocals. Today Vallenato bands are as big as Salsa orchestras, and include additionally congas, timbales, electric guitar, electric bass, a metal g?ira instead of the guacharaca, and a bg. vocals section. Some musicians and composers of the olden times are: Enrique D?az, Leandro D?az, Francisco El Hombre, Alejo Duran, Emiliano Zuleta, Rafael Escalona, Morales or Boveda for example. Contemporary but original Vallenato is performed by artists like Diomedes Diaz, Los Hermanos Zuleta, Jorge O?ate, Iv?n Villazon, Los Betos, El Binomio de Oro, Rafael Santos...
Exitos Vallentos: all of these have long been out of print and are old Vallenato songs. A Compilation of Vallenato
favorites.
Vallenato comes from Colombia?s northern coast . The name is derivated from "Valledupar", the city where it became popular. Valledupar comes from Valle de Upar (Valle = Valley, Upar = A river that crosses this city).
The origins of vallenato are:
- The folkloric Cumbia, using only percussion (Alegre, llamador, bombo, guache, maracas de totumo) and the rustical Gaita flutes (not the one from Schottland!) of the Aruaco Indians from the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta but used mainly in the Departamentos Bolivar, Sucre and C?rdoba, or the "Flauta de Millo" used mainly in Soledad and Barranquilla.
- Later, the "m?sica sabanera", with guitars and tiple (12 strings in 4 groups of three with similar sound to the cuban "tres").
Originally, Vallenato was played using only accordion, guacharaca (something like the g?iro but made of the boughs of the corozo palm), caja vallenata (a drum, a little bigger than a bongo using an x-ray sheet instead of the leather pad) and vocals. Today Vallenato bands are as big as Salsa orchestras, and include additionally congas, timbales, electric guitar, electric bass, a metal g?ira instead of the guacharaca, and a bg. vocals section. Some musicians and composers of the olden times are: Enrique D?az, Leandro D?az, Francisco El Hombre, Alejo Duran, Emiliano Zuleta, Rafael Escalona, Morales or Boveda for example. Contemporary but original Vallenato is performed by artists like Diomedes Diaz, Los Hermanos Zuleta, Jorge O?ate, Iv?n Villazon, Los Betos, El Binomio de Oro, Rafael Santos...
Sources
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Created At
Sat Feb 25 2006 09:39:05 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)
Updated At
Fri Sep 17 2004 21:56:42 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)
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