Home / Tag Archives: Latin Folk (page 3)

Tag Archives: Latin Folk

Oscar Chávez

Oscar Chávez was created in Mexico in 1935. He spent his early years learning theater on the Escuela de Arte Teatral del Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes, the Academia de Teatro del Maestro Seki Sano, as well as the Teatro de la Universidad. Chávez made an appearance in several movies, …

Read More »

Remo Palmier

It usually seemed strange that Remo Palmieri, who gained some interest in the first times of bop, by no means became a larger name, particularly since he was dynamic for such an extended time frame. Palmieri originally hoped to become an designer and he performed guitar with regional groups to …

Read More »

Mercedes Sosa

The traveling force behind the nueva canción motion, singer Mercedes Sosa was created and raised in Tucumán, Argentina, beginning her performing career at age 15 after taking top honors inside a radio station amateur competition. A wealthy, expressive vocalist and a gifted interpreter, Sosa was dubbed “the tone of voice …

Read More »

Nicho Hinojosa

Latin troubadour Nicho Hinojosa (given birth to Dionisio Hinojosa) began singing at age eight. Affected by classic rock and roll bands, he began playing drums in an area ensemble, emerging like a multi-instrumentalist after going to Monterrey’s Escuela First-class de Música con Danza, a exclusive Mexican college of music and …

Read More »

El Chicano

Over time, El Chicano has often been in comparison to Santana and, to be certain, there are a great number of parallels. Both are from California (although various areas of the condition), both are led by Mexican-Americans, both possess recorded in British as well such as Spanish, and both possess …

Read More »

Mariana Montalvo

Surviving in Paris as an expatriate, Mariana Montalvo provides an eclectic, worldly sensibility to her undertake traditional Chilean folk music, often sketching upon the rich poetry of South America’s flourishing literary movement on her behalf lyrics (both self-penned and collaborative). Montalvo’s lushly organized American debut Cantos de Alma premiered by …

Read More »

David Maldonado

Getting into the world of flamenco in 2002, David Maldonado released his debut record Danza. A appearing out of types, Maldonado was a engineer/maker for a long time before expressing his skills like a guitarist. But his debut record demonstrated a strong understand on melody and complicated chord patterns, a …

Read More »

Batacumbele

A hot Afro-Cuban outfit that rivals any today. Their name originates from the bat? drum from Africa in addition to the “cumbia” rhythms of montuno and mambo, which advanced from tribal dance.

Read More »

Antônio Carlos Jobim

It’s been said that Antonio Carlos Brasileiro de Almeida Jobim was the George Gershwin of Brazil, and there’s a sound band of truth for the reason that, for both contributed large body of tunes towards the jazz repertoire, both expanded their reach in to the concert hall, and both have …

Read More »