XLogin

Password lost?  

Facebook Options


Sign up
download process

MP3 Pablo Mayor-Folklore Urbano - Baile/Dance

Price: 8.99 USD
Download
Now
Add to cart
Instant Download from music, digital version

MP3 Album Cover Musicians use tradebit:

Learn how to make music
Pick up cool karaoke downloads
Search for sheet music!
  • Contains these products:
  • Single items of this product are available separately.
  • Te Olvide
    play button
  • Dobladillo a la Lengua
    play button
  • La Pringamosa
    play button
  • Cuando Llegue en Nueva York
    play button
  • Cumbia Sobre el Mar
    play button
  • El Alboroto
    play button
  • Canta Muchacha
    play button
  • Chalupa NY (dance version)
    play button
  • De Ti Ya No Quiero Na
    play button
  • Santa Teresita
    play button
  • Tiempos Buenos
    play button
  • Chalupa NY (jazz version)
    play button
  • El Viejo Jose
    play button
  • Size: 60.5 MB   Platform: MP3 / All Pl

File Data:

Contact Seller: music, CDbaby reseller USA, Member since 06/19/2005
URL: Twitter this Tweet this
Embed: Create JavaScript Mobile Tag Widgets for your homepage

Description:

(ID 1334383)
COLOMBIAN GROOVE, alive like the party, la rumba, of the Colombian night, with rhythms that move the feet and hips of Colombians. Lose yourself dancing to this music, but keep your ear on what's going on in the songs: the music, just like its people, is

13 MP3 Songs
WORLD: World Fusion, LATIN: General



Details:
Robert Kelley Ayala, from his music blog, May 22, 2005:

Because this blog was just written up in a Semana article on music blogs, I want to take this opportunity to tell everyone about one of the best bands I came across in the last year: Folklore Urbano. They're a New York-based band that takes traditional Colombian music and melds it with a gritty jazz sound to produce some of the most sophisticated, danceable music around today.

Folklore Urbano is led by Pablo Mayor, who grew up in Cali and Bogotá and is the former director of the jazz program at the Universidad Javeriana in Bogotá. Now in New York, he's leading a movement that I've decided to call "Nueva Colombia," which is a very modern take on Colombian folkloric music. Their first album, Aviso, boasts a collection of songs that are truly Colombian but don't at all feel out of place on your iPod when you're walking up Avenue C. This isn't smiley "World Music" that you put on while cleaning the house--this is the cosmopolitanism of '70s jazz, and this is the rock'n'roll that you stumble upon at barebones clubs like Sin-E. There's an anxious intensity to it that captures both the joy and the tensions of modern Colombian life.
But on their upcoming album, Baile!, they've really found their groove. I've only heard some unmastered clips of the recordings, but judging from some of their live shows I've seen earlier this year, the sound is much more confident and much more festive. I expect it to be spectacular.


in partnership with CDbaby

More Files From This User