San Francisco, California, USA - Featuring many tracks sourced from local companies, The Rough
Guide To The Music Of The Andes: Bolivia (RGNET1147CD) places the original
architects of the Bolivian sound alongside the modern artists of today.
Framed by snow-capped peaks, La Paz is the largest city of landlocked Bolivia
and the strength of the indigenous culture makes it an ideal home for the
country's music industry. Bolivia is the birthplace of the conjunto folklorico -
a modern marriage of European string instruments and Andean flutes - and home to
the rich musical wealth of nueva canción, taquirari and the striking rhythms of
the Bolivian Carnival.
Born and raised in the remote rural mountain village of Qala Qala, Luzmila
Carpio rose to national attention with her performances at the song competition
in Oruro (home to Bolivia's largest carnival} and was crowned 'ñusta del
folklore' ('princess of folklore'), in 1971. She has dedicated her career to the
music of the Quechua and Aymara people, and 'Bartolino Sisaman' represents the
typical singing style of the southern Altiplano.
At the core of Los Kjarkas, the most famous of all conjunto folklorico groups,
are the Hermosa brothers. Over the years, they have encompassed the performance
of music from indigenous Bolivian people and composed new pieces in traditional
rhythms.
A seminal figure in the cueca scene of Tarija, in southern Bolivia, kindergarten
teacher Enriqueta Ulloa has been performing the music of her homeland for over
thirty years. 'Dalia Morada' ('Purple Dahlia') is a famous tonada and an
invitation to dance.
Grupo Bolivia is an all-female conjunto folklorico that has endured (with some
line-up changes) for more than two decades. 'Añoranzas' is a story of faded love
in a sicuh rhythm, which was traditionally played on zamponas or panpipes.
A more recent conjunto folklorico from Cochabamba, Arawi use a traditional song
style from the highlands called a huayno on the song 'Chofercito'. This is one
of many standard rhythms in the repertoire of folklore groups.
Semilla, a conjunto folklorico led by Alejandro Cámara, has been active since
the early 1990s. 'Wistu Vida' is a tinku (a lively dance inspired by a form of
ritualized combat from the rural Potosi department), currently the most popular
dance at Oruro's carnaval.
Betty Veizaga and El Grupo Pukaj Wayra have been working to bring the music of
northern Potosi department to the rest of Bolivia and the world, and the first
section of 'Ulala Kiskita' perfectly captures the rural roots of tinku.
One of the first Andean folk ensembles to achieve international acclaim, Savia
Andina was formed by a group of students in the 1960s. Since then, Gerardo Arias
(guitar), Eddy Navia {charango) and Oscar Castro (guitar), have toured virtually
every corner of the globe and have recorded more than forty albums.
Esther Marisol is less tradition-bound than other tarijenas, such as Enriqueta
Ulloa, and 'El Guajojo' is a taquirari (a rhythm from the tropical east of the
country) and a serenade.
Zulma Yugar, from the department of Oruro, in Bolivia's central Altiplano is a
beloved public figure having served as in Bolivia's Ministry of Culture.
Renowned as an interpreter of traditional Bolivian music, 'El Trasnochador' is
another taquirari.
A founding member of one of the first ever conjunto folklorico, Ernesto Cavour
later made several solo recordings and became famous for inventing new
instruments. 'Greda Mestiza' is a showcase for his rapid-fire charango (a small
guitar traditionally made from armadillo shields) strumming, inventive use of
harmonics and his prowess as an arranger.
Ana Cristina Cespedes grew up in Cochabamba and begun learning the charango at
11. 'Paloma Del Alma Mia', is her most famous song, and countless groups in
Bolivia and Peru have since covered it. The Grupo Aymara song, 'Huellas De Mi
Llamita', is a study for charango, guitar, wind and percussion, which was
composed by darken Orozco, the group's leader and multi-instrumentalist.
The Rough Guide To The Music Of The Andes: Bolivia is an excellent introduction
to the sounds of the region and also features Luis Rico, Rafael Arias Paz and
Emma Junaro.
[Buy
The Rough Guide to the Music of the Andes: Bolivia].
World Music Central
http://www.worldmusiccentral.org/article.php/200505281526179