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edgar benitez

Peruvian Music - 0 views

    • silvana escobar
       
      This page, seems reliable and also very interesting. I believe it's an outstanding page!
  • For most people outside Latin America the sound of the Andes is that of bamboo panpipes and quena flutes
  • The dominant areas of Andean culture are Peru , Ecuador and Bolivia, the countries with the largest indigenous Amerindian populations in South America.
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  • Andean music can be divided roughly into three types. Firstly, that which is of indigenous origin , found mostly amongst rural Amerindian peoples still living very much by the seasons with root Amerindian beliefs; secondly music of European origin , and thirdly mestizo music, which continues to fuse the indigenous with European in a whole host of ways.
  •             For most peopl
  • e outside Latin America the sound of the Andes is that of bamboo panpipes and quena flutes.
  • most remarkable is that these instruments have been used to create music in various parts of this large area of mountains - which stretch 4500 miles from Venezula down to southernmost Chile - since before the time of the Incas. Pre-Conquest Andean instruments - conch shell trumpets, shakers which used nuts for rattles, ocarinas, wind instruments and drums - are ever present in museum collections. And the influence of the Inca Empire means that the Andean region and its music spreads far beyond the mountains themselves
  • Peruvian oldest musical traditions are those of the Amerindians of the Andes. Their music is best known outside the country through the characteristic panpipes of poncho-clad folklore groups. However, there's a multitude of rhythms and popular music found here deserve a lot more recognition, including and, still relatively unknown abroad, as well as the distinct coastal tradition of, rooted in black slaves brought to work in the mines.            
  • Quechua (currently spoken by over six million people) and Aymara, both of which are spoken alongside Spanish and other Amerindian languages.
  • For most people outside Latin America the sound of the Andes is that of bamboo panpipes and quena flutes.
  • nstruments and drums
  • this large area of mountains -
  • Peruvian oldest musical traditions are those of the Amerindians of the Andes. Their music is best known outside the country through the characteristic panpipes of poncho-clad folklore groups. However, there's a multitude of rhythms and popular music found here deserve a lot more recognition, including and, still relatively unknown abroad, as well as the distinct coastal tradition of, rooted in black slaves brought to work in the mines.            
    • Ana Sofia Perdomo
       
      peruvian intro
    • Ana Sofia Perdomo
       
      peruvian oldest musical tradition are those o the armendians of the andes. Their music
    • ana lucia arteaga luna
       
      peruvian music is divided in three parts
  • Peruvian oldest musical traditions are those of the Amerindians of the Andes.
  • Use of different scales involving four, five, six and seven notes and different singing styles are also found from place to place, tied to specific ritual occasions and the music which goes with them.
  • an oldest musical traditions are those of the Amerindians of the Andes. Their music is best known outside the country through the characteristic panpipes of poncho-clad folklore groups. However, there's a multitude of rhythms and popular music found here deserve a lot more recognition, including and, still relatively unknown abroad, as well as the distinct coastal tradition of, rooted in black slaves brought to work in the mines.            
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    cool its insterting because it has a lots of facts
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    peruvian music is the oldest musical tradition of the Amerindians in the Andes.the music is known through the woodwind family, means panpipes and all that type of flutes.the Andes is a stretch of 4500 miles from Venezuela to chie.
ivanna salome

Andean music - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • Andean music is a group of styles of music from the Andes region in Southamerica.
    • ivanna salome
       
      the style of the andean music is from south america 
  • Andean music has served as a major source of inspiration for the neo-folkloric Nueva canción movement that begun in the 60s, Nueva canción musicians both interpreted old songs and created new pieces that are now considered andean music. Some Nueva canción musicians such as Los Jaivas would fuse Andean music with psychedelic and progressive rock.
    • Gabriela Rodriguez
       
      nueva cancion fact 
  • The panpipes group include the sikú (or zampoña) and antara. These are ancient indigenous instruments that vary in size, tuning and style. Instruments in this group are constructed from aquatic reeds found in many lakes in the Andean Region of South America. The sikú has two rows of canes and are tuned in either pentatonic or diatonic scales. Some modern single-rowed panpipes modeled after the native Antara are capable of playing full scales, while traditional Sikús are played using two rows of canes wrapped together.
    • ivanna salome
       
      the different instruments in andean are pinpipes siku zampona and antara
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  • Quenas (notched-end flutes) remain popular and are traditionally made out of the same aquatic canes as the Sikús, although PVC pipe is sometimes used due to its resistance to heat, cold and humidity.
  • It includes folklore music of parts of Argentina, Bolivia, Ecuador, Chile, Colombia, Peru and Venezuela. Andean music is popular to different degrees across Latin America,
  • The Nueva Canción movement of the 70s revived the genre across Latin America and brought it to places where it was unknown or forgotten.
  • quenas only are played during the
  • dry season
  • vertical flutes, either pinkillos or tarkas, being played during the wet season.
  • Tarkas are constructed from local Andean hard wood sources
  • Marching bands dominated by drums and panpipes are commonplace today and are used to celebrate weddings, carnivals and other holidays.
  • The twentieth century saw drastic changes in Andean society and culture. Bolivia, for example, saw a nationalistic revolution in 1952,
  • Los Curacas took the fusion work of Los Jairas and the Parras to invent nueva canción, which returned to Bolivia in the 1980s in the form of canto nuevo artists such as Emma Junaro and Matilde Casazola.
  • The 1970s was a decade in which Andean music saw its biggest growth.
  • Different groups sprang out of the different villages throughout the Andes Region. Peru, Ecuador, Chile, Bolivia, Colombia and Argentina.
  • hey would later take Andean music to the rest of the world.
  • Originally from the Caribbean coast of Colombia, cumbia became a hit in Peru and through much of Latin America. It was then adapted to a "Peruvian" version called "Chicha" that has become a popular style in the Andean region, specially among in the lower socioeconomic strata of the society including Quechua and Aymara populations
r4u115-_-

Music History | Andean Nation - 0 views

  • The haunting sounds of bamboo pipes have formed a part of the Andean landscape for over two millennia. The Andean melodies most people are exposed to today, however, are a result of centuries of colonialism and the migrations of peoples from different regions and continents.
  • Many people associate indigenous Andean instruments to the time of the Inca. Flutes are generically labeled “Inca Pan-Pipes”
  • While the Incas certainly employed the instruments we know as “Andean”
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  • they introduced styles of music and instruments during their conquests.
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    this are some peruvian instruments
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    This is one of the famous instruments of the andean music made by the incas
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    How the Andes be inmuned to forces of globalization? Spanish conquest made some changes in the Andean music world. They introduce the string instruments,
edgar benitez

Peruvian Music - 0 views

shared by edgar benitez on 19 Feb 14 - No Cached
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