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Send us a textExplore the vibrant and unique world of Cumbia music like never before! Join us on an unparalleled journey through the rich history and evolution of this iconic genre that has captivated audiences across the Americas. From its African and Indigenous roots to its influence on Latin American culture, Cumbia has become a timeless sound with countless variations—from traditional Colombian Cumbia to Mexican, Peruvian, and Argentinian adaptations. Whether you're a seasoned fan or new to Cumbia, this deep dive will highlight the rhythm, passion, and cultural significance that have made Cumbia a staple in Latin music history. Don't miss out on this exciting look into the heart and soul of Cumbia!#Cumbia #CumbiaMusic #LatinMusic #CumbiaHistory #MusicaLatina #LatinCulture #CumbiaFans #ColombianCumbia #MexicanCumbia #PeruvianCumbia #ArgentinianCumbia #CumbiaLovers #CumbiaTradition #MusicHistory #ExploreCumbiaSupport the showSocial Media:Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheGlobalLatinFactorPodcastTwitter: https://twitter.com/thegloballatin1Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thegloballatinfactorpodcastTiktok: ...
Send us a textClub South brings you mix #8, this time with the gutteral sounds of gqom and club hybrids from DJ goodfat.Raised by a Persian Father and Mexican Mother, DJ goodfat grew up in a multicultural household in Houston, Texas. Influenced by Southern Rap, New York Hip-Hop, UK Grime, Norteña Cumbias, Reggae, Dancehall, and Gqom; DJ goodfat wows audiences with his presentation of danceable rhythms. He has adopted a strong sense of rhythm and timing to keep the club moving, and aims to elevate dance floors with his infectious energy. FOLLOW DJ gOODFAT ON SOCIALS!https://soundcloud.com/djgoodfathttps://www.instagram.com/djgoodfat/https://djgoodfat.bandcamp.comSupport the showThe South Gots Something to Say!
It's the doggy dodgy days of late July and the American political landscape has never felt more like a spilled ice cream melting on the sidewalk with lots of ants all over it, oh to escape. Worldy heads to the islands where the heat is even more intense but this only makes the cold drinks go down better and the relief of shade that more comfortable. The tunes are Latin swing, jazz cats, steel drums, Cumbias, it's a party with very few tan lines. Featured music; Ziad Rahbani, Manu Dibango, Grupo Magnético, Swinging Stars Of Dominica, Meridian Brothers Y Grupo Renacimiento, Mexican Institute Of Sound, Tony Seymour And The Night-Beaters Johnny Lytle, and loads more. For more info and tracklisting, visit: https://thefaceradio.com/worldy/Tune into new broadcasts of Worldy with Matt and Dom, LIVE, Mondays from 10 AM - 12 Noon EST / 3- 5 PM GMT.//Dig this show? Please consider supporting The Face Radio: http://support.thefaceradio.com Support The Face Radio with PatreonSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/thefaceradio. Join the family at https://plus.acast.com/s/thefaceradio. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
I had the opportunity to sit down with Boyle Heights very own… Eduardo Arenas. We really dive into the details today… From, Metal Head to Cumbias. USC to Brazil. Chicano Batman to É Arenas. And of course, FAMILIA. El Compa was droppin some influential and motivating stories! Take a Seat. Relax and Enjoy.I think you're going to enjoy this one. #EmoBrownEmpire #EmoBrown #ThePodcast
WELCOME EVERYONE TO THE CINCO DE MAYO PARTY WEEK EXCLUSIVELY ON DARK ROAST PROJECT…THAT'S RIGHT FOLKS… WE ARE CELEBRATING CINCO DE MAYO ALL WEEK LONG... I'M TALKING ABOUT LATIN HOUSE & EDM FOR HALF OF THE MIX,THEN I'LL SWITCH IT UP WITH A THROWBACK BANDA, CUMBIAS, AND MORE SURPRISE DROPS… LISTEN ON:APPLE PODCAST: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-dark-roast-project-hosted-by-dj-oz/id1695213631YOUTUBE MUSIC: https://youtube.com/@oscarramos736?feature=sharedMIX-CLOUD: https://www.mixcloud.com/djoz408/AMAZON MUSIC: https://a.co/d/itgPWzlAUDIBLE BOOKS: https://www.audible.com/podcast/The-Dark-Roast-Project-Hosted-by-DJ-Oz/B0CBVXRG56?source_code=ASSORAP0511160006&share_location=podcast_show_detailFEATURED DJS:DJ VINO: https://www.instagram.com/djvino06/DJ VINO MIXCLOUD: https://www.mixcloud.com/djvino6/DJ SS: https://www.instagram.com/vdjss/ LOS TEQUILEROS: https://www.instagram.com/los.tekileros/JALEXIS: https://www.instagram.com/jalexisthedj/DJ IKONIX: https://www.instagram.com/officialdjikonix/PLAYGIRL CARII https://www.instagram.com/playgirlcariiidj/
Quien Dido Yo Quiero Cumbias ?? Aqui Complaciendo El Pedido De Todos. También Estoy En ( Apple Podcast) ( Amazon Podcast)( SoundCloud ) Es Completamente Gratis Para Escuchar…. Suscribir ti, pone un like, comparte,sigueme…Clic a tu Notificacio para que recibas cuando suba música nueva que tengan un Buen Dia .. ‘'Cada Viernes Nuevos Mix.''
WELCOME BACK TO THE PREQUEL EDITION OF THE DARK ROAST PROJECT…MY NAME IS DJ OZ AND THIS IS EPISODE 97… WITH MORE LATIN MIX CULTURE FOR YOU!.. SALUDOS A QUIEN ESCUCHAN EN MEXICO, BOLIVIA, EQUADOR, AND SALVADOR. SO, IF YOU ENJOY THE SHOW AND YOU ARE LOOKING FOR A DJ YOU CAN TRUST FOR YOUR NEXT EVENT, LET'S TALK…I HAVE OVER A DECADE OF PERFORMING AT WEDDINGS, ANNIVERSARIES, BRITHDAY PARTIES, QUINCENERAS, CLUB, AND CORPORATE EVENTS THROUGH OUT CALIFORNIA.I LOOK FORWARD TO HEARING FROM YOU FOR A FREE CONSULTATION AND BOOKING AVAILABILITY…I WILL LEAVE EMAIL ADDRESS IN THE DESCRIPTION BELOW!BOOK DJ OZ: o.ramos2008@gmail.com -CONNECT WITH DJ SS: https://www.mixcloud.com/hector-djss-flores/ - https://www.instagram.com/vdjss/ - https://www.facebook.com/HectorDJSSFlores -
Programa de Radio No.273, Podcast No. 422Transmitido el 27 de diciembre de 2023 por Radio y TV. Querétaro 100.3 FMEsta vez nos adelantamos un poco a la publicación del Podcast para conmemorar el 28 de diciembre, día de los Santos Inocentes, una costumbre que poco a poco se pierde, pero que en Del Bit a la Orquesta, hemos querido aprovechar para cumplir con una temática que nos habían pedido tiempo atrás, así que, si quieren disfrutar de buenas Cumbias y Salsas en Videojuegos, denle Play ya que hemos hecho este especial de una manera muy especial, ¡pero ojo!; por única ocasión este episodio tiene un pequeño fragmento de lenguaje no apto para menores cortesía del histrión Alfonso Zayas rememorando sus típicas películas de ficheras para tener un ambiente completo en este episodio.
Desde Bacoachi, Sonora el compa El Frizian que anda haciendo ruido machín con su música estuvo con nosotros en la Pepe's Office. Un compa a toda madre y que tiene unas cumbias estilo sonara muy perras. Únete al canal de miembros para Contenido Exclusivo: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC7NF0vmsihFTx4uM4aeUhXQ/join Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/78hb7uZVJgudPVUFq9FOJt?si=SNQYamEaSoS3EYD7xy7ZIw Instagram Pepe's Office: https://instagram.com/pepesoffice?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y= Instagram Pepe Garza: https://instagram.com/pepegarza?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y= Facebook Pepe's Office: https://www.facebook.com/PepesOffice Twitter: https://twitter.com/pepesoffice Para adquirir el Libro "TU TIENES TALENTO" da Click en el siguiente Link: https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_2?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=PEPE+GARZA+BOOK El Frizian: Llega al RUEDO Con CORRIDOS SALVAJES | Pepe's Office #PEPEGARZA #PEPESOFFICE #ELFRIZIAN Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
#ENVIVO Acapulco poco a poco se recupera. Las cumbias y la música regresaron a las playas, un antro abrió el fin de semana y hay 4 supermercados funcionando. El colaborador de la alcaldesa Lía Limón perdió el ojo tras el atentado del viernes. Así fue el ataque: See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Llega el especial Halloween con recuerdo para Matthew Perry y Pep Vila. Desvelamos en primícia cómo es el Más Allá y cerramos con la previa al festival Terror Molins y la esperadísima vuelta de Cinemónguer. Alineación: Max Rebo, Xivito, Nex Programa 396: Las cumbias de Halloween
Christian Sotomayor "El Cumbias" - Parrilleros Mamones Podcast #16
Banda Imperio con los temas "Canchame" " La Danza Del Coyote" " Pica Perica" en vivo desde el Malecon de OC. Siguenos: @ActivozProductions --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/zonavipradio/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/zonavipradio/support
Las 45 Cumbias Nortenas Mix Bellas ⚡ Puras Cumbias Norteñas Para Bailar
Lo Mejor de Rigo Tovar, Fito Olivares, Acapulco Tropical, Xavier Passos
#HoyEsUnBuenDia y ASÍ COMENZAMOS, CON LA MEJOR BUENA VIBRA Y UN MIX DE CUMBIAS CHIDO DI "NO A LA VIOLENCIA" EN CUALQUIERA DE SUS FORMAS Y AMA... ¡CALIFICA EL PODCAST EN SPOTIFY! APOYA ESTE PODCAST: MERCADO PAGO; CLABE: 646016206870727626//José Rafael Herrera Fernández//Receptor del Banco: STP www.paypal.me/falloherrera anchor.fm/falloherrera/support EN ESTADOS UNIDOS: BANCO PRIMER SIGLO // RUTA 061120084 // CUENTA 4022183890833 // TIPO DE CUENTA ; COMPROBACIONES // José Rafael Herrera Fernández Mi otro podcast en Spotify (Hagamos #HeCo Juntos): https://open.spotify.com/show/33I3LMhadxx066wfOqYMEy Mi otro podcast en Amazon Music (Hagamos #HeCo Juntos): https://music.amazon.com.mx/podcasts/88786f34-816a-4965-a5d9-35824729dd7d/hagamos-heco-juntos MI CANAL EN YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/c/FalloHerrera/videos https://www.youtube.com/@HagamosHeCoJuntos ESTE PODCAST EN AMAZON MUSIC: https://music.amazon.com.mx/podcasts/d39ce07f-89ba-47af-9df8-dcc56210228b/afalloherrera ESTE PODCAST EN SPOTIFY: https://open.spotify.com/show/3teAdOONrUxNRXmO7WGbAJ?si=a030eafe7a1d49c2 #electronica #house #hiphop #edm #dancehall #afrobeats #reggae #pop #reggaeton #salsa #hardrock #rock #funky #guaracha #regionalmexicana #latinos #tecno #video Pero sobre todo; #BuenaVibra y #vivamexico Si eres un artista, envíame tu tema y lo colocamos en el podcast para apoyar a que se escuche un poco mas... Mi WhatsApp (+52) 2291034593 Veracruz, México ó búscame en Telegram como: @falloherrera https://www.twitch.tv/falloherrera --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/falloherrera/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/falloherrera/support
In Episode 8 of the Brown Sound Podcast, hosts Javi and Daniel sit down local artists Lobo Lara and Chilli Willy, known for their deep connection to cumbia music. Through engaging storytelling, the hosts delve into their upbringing, the serendipitous meeting that sparked their partnership, and the unique paths they've taken in their careers. Exploring their shared passion for the genre, the conversation uncovers how Lobo Lara and Chilli Willy's contributions resonate within the community. The episode also delves into valuable life lessons drawn from their experiences. the hurdles they've overcome, and the insightful advice they have to offer. The hosts speak from a Latino and Indigenous perspective. Make sure to follow the Brown Sound Podcast on Instagramhttps://www.instagram.com/brownsoundpodcastMore information on Lobo Lara & Chilli Willyhttps://www.instagram.com/lobolara208https://www.instagram.com/el_chilli_willy_Listen to "Hijo De La Cumbia" NOW on Apple Music & Spotify
En esta emisión: 1. Actualidad Universitaria en Colombia. 1.1. Hay reforma a la ley 30 de 1992. Caso ASPU: Capítulo Financiación 2. Cápsulas para la memoria 2.1. Normativa actual de la Universidad, migración docente. Nuevas incidencias orgánicas con las nuevas facultades 3. ¿Cómo vamos UD? 3.1. Un pasito pa'lante, tres pasitos para atrás a los docentes TCO 4. Reforma Universitaria 4.1. Tareas y reglamentaciones en contravía al 03/97 Zona musical: Sacar La Voz ft. Jorge Drexler - Ana Tijoux Chicas del sol - Cumbias amazónicas Univalle - Al docente temporal SUPLEMENTO: 1. Univertopías y el proceso de paz en Colombia 1.1. Lectura del Informe de la Comisión de la Verdad: Hallazgos y recomendaciones: 3. Violaciones de derechos humanos e infracciones al derecho internacional humanitario: 3.18. La libertad de residir, circular y poseer: el desplazamiento forzado, el confinamiento y el despojo. 1.2. Galo Mora: Resurge el fascismo en el mundo, en entrevista para en para leer en libertad (parte 2) 2. Otras noticias de la U 3. Otras noticias de la Universidad 3.1. Las respuestas de las directivas ante denuncias de déficit presupuestal y de infraestructura en la Universidad Distrital (circula documento del Ministerio) 3.2. Ministerio socializa documento base de reforma a la ley 30 3.3. Grado doce Zona musical: Hit Me - Molotov Canción de Soldados - María José Llergo El pueblo unido jamás será vencido - Inti Illimani
On this episode I take you into some something you heard during a California Latin Family gathering. The mix includes dance Hip-Hop from East & West Coasts, Cumbias, Reggaton, and Uptempo Energy-Dance music. MESSAGE ME ON INSTAGRAM IF YOU ARE AN UPCOMING DJ INTERESTED ON SHOWCASING YOUR TALENT ON THIS SHOW.FOLLOW AND SUBSCRIBE TO THIS PODCAST AND Make sure to rate the show!!ALSO, FOLLOW ME ON INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/dj_oz_408/?igshid=OGQ5ZDc2ODk2ZA%3D%3D
The new mix is a selection of hot tropical sounds. Cumbias, porro, cumbia rock, reggae, ska, samba, dancehall, maracatú and many more. Traditional and modern sounds blended together for a musical journey around the tropics in the American continent. Enjoy its flavours! Info NDFM Website - info – pics – Content - Music Videos – NDFM's Music Player Please go to - https://www.nudirectionsfm.com/ Please enjoy the music I love PLAYLIST: 1- Cartagenera - DUTCH RHYTHM COMBO 2- Cumbia en el monte - PEDRO LAZA Y SUS PELAYEROS 3- Sabor (featuring TEMPO) - QUANTIC 4- La camita - TRAFFIC SOUND 5- Salary man - MANU CHAO 6- Boombox - EARLY B. 7- Se baila así - MEXICAN INSTITUTE OF SOUND 8- Maracatú da D. Santa - MEICIO ASKANASY, JOSE PRATES, IVAN DE PAULA 9- Garden of love - DON DRUMMOND 10- Slow dance - BLUNDETTO 11- La cosa más chunga - MODAJI 12- Dear Neven - BATIDOS 13- As famosas gargalhadas do Yuka (SAO BENITEZ FUEGO mix) - PAULA LIMA 14- Cumbia sobre el rio …(suena) - CELSO PIÑA (featuring CONTROL MACHETE and BLANQUITO MAN)
Aqui les dejamos un mix lleno de ritmo y saborrrrrr , un saborrrrr a cumbia sonidera .
Empezamos y terminamos bailando, a base de cumbias y slängpolskas y, entretanto, viajamos entre inspiraciones latinoamericanas, indias, irlandesas, balcánicas, ibéricas y escandinavas. Celebramos la reedición de discos imprescindibles de la artista angloindia Sheila Chandra y homenajeamos a dos grandes músicos que nos han dejado recientemente: el irlandés Seán Keane, violinista durante muchos años de los magistrales The Chieftains, y el maestro macedonio del clarinete Ferus Mustafov. We start and end dancing with cumbias and slängpolskas and, in the meantime, we travel among Latin American, Indian, Irish, Balkan, Iberian and Scandinavian inspirations. We celebrate the re-release of indispensable albums by the Anglo-Indian artist Sheila Chandra and pay tribute to two great musicians who have recently left us: the Irish artist Seán Keane, fiddler for many years for the magnificent The Chieftains, and the Macedonian clarinet maestro Ferus Mustafov. Cumbias en Moog - Cumbia de sal - Cumbias en Moog Poppy y sus Pirañas - La sureñita - Quiero... Pedro Rosa - Na rota do umbuzeiro - Midnight alvorada Sheila Chandra - Speaking In tongues II - Weaving my ancestors' voices Sheila Chandra - Dhyana and donalogue - Weaving my ancestors' voices The Chieftains - The foxhunt - Live! Ferus Mustafov - Romska gajda - King Ferus Bjonko- At the bazaar - Balkan express Tradifusió - Antigua jota segoviana - Empeltant arrels Svøbsk - Sorgenfri - Sorgenfri Hialøsa - Ack / Slängpolskor - Scanian very old pop (Svøbsk - Alabaster - Sorgenfri) 📸 Seán Keane
Were back with another cumbia session ft EduardoYanezMusic to bring us some saborrrrrr . Ahi vienen las cumbias sonideras!
Popurrí de cumbias al estilo de Banda Vallense, en las fiestas patronales en Honor a Santa Cecilia. Dios bendiga Espera nuestros próximos eventos y muy pronto estaremos en tu ciudad ! Síguenos en nuestras redes sociales --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/zonavipradio/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/zonavipradio/support
Las Cumbias Que Te Encantan Escuchar También Estoy En ( iTunes… ) Y (SoundCloud ) Es Completamente Gratis Para Escuchar…. Suscribir ti, pone un like, comparte,sigueme…Clic a tu Notificacio para que recibas cuando suba música nueva que tengan un Buen Dia .. ‘'Cada Viernes Nuevos Mix.'
Hablando de #Cumbias y de #MúsicaTropical uno de los referentes obligados en este género, es sin dudas, la única e internacional #SonoraDinamita de don Lucho Argaín, quien por cerca de 60 años, ha sido parte de la algarabía popular de gran parte del mundo. Hoy en el podcast de El Filip, haremos un recorrido por esta impresionante trayectoria musical y sabremos el por qué existen más de 100 agrupaciones con este nombre.
Hospitality, Advocacy, Education and Community (Belonging) with Latina Martha Little of Kitsap County - "Anytime we have a conversation with, with someone, it's like, um, you are part of our family. You are part of us. And so we want to impart that, that wisdom and that love, because we want to, um, we want to ensure that we're all a family and we're all, you know, um, benefiting from, from each other." Transcripts:Danielle (02:22):So, I, I wanted to just hear from you because every time I talk to you, there's like a little bits of wisdom in, in all the sentences. And I think that's true of most Latinas. Like, they start talking to you and they're like, By the way, let me give you this piece of really important advice,Martha Little (02:37):. Yeah. It's, it's our culture, right? Um, we are the, we are Tias to everyone. I mean, that's just, it is, is, um, anytime we have a conversation with, with someone, it's like, um, you are part of our family. You are part of us. And so we want to impart that, that wisdom and that love, because we want to, um, we want to ensure that we we're all a family and we're all, you know, um, benefiting from, from each other.Danielle (03:08):Right. And as a community member, I wonder if you would be willing to speak from your experience, Like, what are the aspects that make you feel belonging or maybe you, you, it's easier to speak to where you don't belong? I'm not sure .Martha Little (03:22):Um, you know, I think that, I mean, I could speak to both. Um, I think that, um, as the older I get, um, the more, um, the more comfortable I am with, um, presenting myself as fully as I am. Um, and so I think that, um, throughout my life, um, I, I was trying so hard not to assimilate, but to, um, I was trying so hard to, um, to have others like me and include me and, and to, um, and to build a space where, where I could show up as myself. And, um, and I just, it seemed like it didn't matter what I did, it just wasn't going to happen. And, um, and I realized that, um, you know, when my kids are, were in high school, and I can tell you a little bit more about that, but I came to this realization that, um, I was, I was perfect just the way I am.Like, I don't need to change. I don't need to, um, to pretend to be something. I am not just to be included. And so, um, so I started showing up as myself. I started speaking my mind. I started, um, just being more, um, more outwardly Latina than I had been before. And, um, and I realized that, um, you know, the spaces that, that I was going into that maybe did not, did not feel like it was a space where I belonged, I, I started realizing that I had to say something. I had to, um, call it out and help them create a space for my, for me and for, for kids that I support and communities that I support. And so, um, I think that one, some of the things that, that organizations can do to create spaces where, um, where I can show up and feel like I belong in other, other community members like myself, um, is to, um, welcome us into the space.I mean, just the smile and then acknowledgement that we have entered the space, um, because that's part of our culture is Latinos. I mean, it's that instant smile, Oh, like, what was that? And then, you know, we gravitate and we wanna touch, we wanna shake hands, or we wanna hug, we want to embrace. And, um, and so I think that, you know, white culture, this embracing sometimes is a little awkward. We have our little space bubble that we don't want people to, to cross. And, and we, and I can respect that most of us can, I, I feel, but, but even just that smile, that greeting that, Hey, how are you? Good to see you. Welcome. You know, that would be, um, number one is like, create a space instantly when the person walks in, greet them, um, and let them know that they're, that they're welcome in there.And then also, um, you know, create a space where, where, um, people are allowed to show up as themselves and speak without criticism. Um, and so, and, and I'll give you an example. I was in a meeting once, um, where they were going over the, the, uh, meeting norms. And one of the norms was to, um, to monitor our, our voice level, our tone, and our body language. And I had to raise my hand and I said, Well, I need to leave then. And they said, What do you mean you're welcome here? And I said, No, that agreement right there tells me that I am not welcome if I have to monitor my body language, I am Latina. We speak with our hands, you know, we speak with our heads, we speak with our bodies. I mean, we get into this conversation, I said, And then, and then if I have to monitor my tone, if I have to monitor my voice, voice level, then I'm not gonna speak.Because as a Latina, I tend to sometimes get very animated and my voice raises and that, and so, and so, they're like, Oh, oh no, that's not what we meant. What should that say then? And so, um, and so we work through that together as a team. And it took several meetings before we, we ca and I don't even remember where we landed, but it's, again, it's being, um, being aware that sometimes the, the norms or the expectations we have for that space, um, create, um, spaces where we don't feel welcomed, where we can't show up. So in that particular meeting, it, I had to show up as white to be, to feel like I belonged in there. I had to speak softly. I had to, um, sit with my body quiet. And, and that's not who I am. And not that I haven't done that in the past in order to succeed in, in, in this society I have. Um, but like I said earlier, I'm at a point now where it's like, I'm gonna show up as myself, and I'm gonna help you create spaces where I can show up as myself. Um, and so, you know, just, I don't know if you've experienced that through your life, where we've, the more we mature, the more we start to shift and say, Wait, that's not who I am. I wanna be me, and I'm gonna help you create that space.Danielle (08:46):I love what you said about welcoming and the sense of hospitality. Even when you show up to a group that is inhospitable, maybe could be seen as inhospitable from there when the cultures come together. Right, Right. It's not necessarily a mix. I had a friend say to me recently, she said, I don't know if, if you are identifying more as Latina or before you just accommodated me,Martha Little (09:13): I'm a love that that's exactly it right there. We do accommodate, um, for others cuz we, we want to help them feel comfortable around us. And, um, but I think that there should be a give and take there. We sh we can create spaces where we all feel comfortable, where we all feel welcomed, you know? And, um, it's just a, a little bit of a shift. We're not talking about a, you know, complete change, but just a little shift, think about others and think about how, what kind of spaces they want. And, and I know it's cultural, right? My husband is from, um, Maine mm-hmm. , and, um, and they are very stoic people there, you know, and I'm not, and that's very, I mean, this is a generalization, but his family, anyway, they're very stoic and, and they tend to be, um, very quiet. And so, um, and so I am also aware of that. I'm also aware of that. And so I'm willing to, now as an adult, I'm willing to help them understand why it's important for me to show up as myself and honor the fact that they are going to be very quiet and very stoic. So create a space where we can coexist as each other.Danielle (10:28):Mm-hmm. . Yeah. So it sounds like you've done a lot of internal processing or internal work to move from like, Hey, I'm, I'm gonna move and kinda, you know, fit in as white to where I'm gonna move in the spaces I'm moving, which likely are predominantly white institutions if you're in education in the Northwest and show up as my Latina self. Do you have some of how you process that or moved through thatMartha Little (10:57):Yeah, so, um, so the shift started, um, when, my daughters, um, went to high school. And so prior to that I was a stay home mom. And I, um, you know, I was a classic soccer mom, you know, drove 'em to all the different functions and that, and, and, um, we spoke, um, some Spanish at home, but not a lot because I wanted them to, to have a, a strong grasp of the English language. And, and I wanted them to succeed academically and also, um, do well in, you know, in their social environment. And so, um, and that's, that's when I, that's when I, I guess I suppressed my Latina on this because I wanted them to succeed. I wanted them to have opportunities. And, um, come to find out, um, they started sharing with me that they were feeling like they didn't belong in the, in the, um, you know, Mexican community, which is we have a higher number of a Mexican community and impossible.Um, and they didn't fit in the white world. they weren't Mexican enough because they didn't speak the language as much as, and because they were involved in different sports and they, they just, their lifestyle was different. So they weren't Mexican enough, so, so they didn't belong to, to that community, but then their white peers did not accept them as white. They weren't white enough. Mm-hmm. . And that's when I, I realized that I was doing them a disservice by, um, by trying to, trying to assimilate essentially. Um, and, um, because it was, it was hurting them because they were lost between these two worlds. And so that's when I realized that I needed to just show up as myself and, and I needed to help them understand who they were and help them navigate this world. Um, you know, And so that, that was a total shift for me. That's when the big earrings came back. That's when the heels came back. That's when, when all of that that I had, um, set aside for, for many years. Um, it, it, it was this, I need to infuse this pride in my girls. I need them to feel what I have suppressed for so long. I need them to feel that pride because that's what's gonna help them navigate this, this world.Danielle (13:27):What did it feel like to return to yourself in that way? To like, put on the big earrings, like the outward things, but there were inward things that you,Martha Little (13:36):There were inward things. Yeah. Um, you know what it was, um, it was free. I mean, it was, and I didn't, I guess I didn't even realize it. Um, it's almost like, I don't know if you've ever, I mean, Saturday morning loud music and dancing in a house that's classic Latina, that's how it felt. It felt like one day I woke up and I cranked up the Cumbias and I was dancing and singing, you know, and the whole family was, was partaking in this celebration. It felt like I came alive. Um, and, um, it just felt like, okay, I am, you know, I am, I am me, I am Latina and I can embrace this and I can, um, I can help my, my daughters and then my son embrace this, but then also help our, our kids in our, in our schools, um, you know, uh, feel pride in that.And I don't know if you remember, that's when we started Kule mm-hmm. because that's when it was like, Okay, we need to feel proud of who we are and, um, and we need to outwardly show that pride. And so it was like an awakening for me. Mm-hmm. And it was, it was pretty powerful. It was also, um, it also brought me a lot of joy, um, just inward joy. And it just, and it poured out, I mean, um, regularly. And, and so, um, my hope is that I can take that experience and then help others navigate, um, you know, our, our systems now because, um, no matter how much we try to be white, um, it's not gonna happen. And we, we are still outwardly brown and we're still not going to be embraced by white society the way we, we hope to be embraced. And so, um, so it is better to show up fully as ourselves with that understanding. And then, um, work hard to, to change, um, systems.Danielle (15:51):Yeah. You work in the education system. Would you be willing to speak to, I hear that it's like when your, your kids were in high school, right? Is that when you returned to education or got started on that path?Martha Little (16:02):Oh, yes. , yes. Oh, yeah.Danielle (16:05):Oh. What is that path for you? I know you were a teacher. Yes. Yeah.Martha Little (16:11):Yes. So, and I get that old lady. No, so I'm, I'm fine. I'm not emotional, just, um, but um, yeah, so the reason, so before that, I was in the business world, um, prior to, to children. And so, um, you know, I had, I had a, a great career and then got married, had kids, um, and stayed home for a while. And, um, it was actually an experience at one of the, um, secondary schools. Um, my oldest was a sixth grader, and, um, she was being, they were gonna put her in a, um, like a homework help class. And this is a college, this is a college bound kid. She's going to college. We know she's, she, she has, you know, um, we know she's gonna go to school and she, and she wants to, um, to excel academically. And so I went to the school to, um, to, to get her schedule changed cuz she tried. And they told her they couldn't. And so I went and I went there, um, dressed like a mom, you know, ponytail, jeans, but shirt and, and, um, I, I was, um, ignored. I stood in the office for like 20 minutes and no one acknowledged that I was there. And when I finally went up and, and I got, and I got someone to acknowledge I was there, I was dismissed, I was told admin was not available, and I was told that counselors were not available. I was told that my daughter could not be moved out of the class. And so, uh, that moment was pivotal for me because, um, I called my husband and I said, I'm going back to school. I mean, get my teaching. All I needed was my, my teaching certificate. Wow. And I said, because I need to be part of the system. I need to change things. The other thing I did is I went home, I put on a suit, did my hair, I put on makeup, heels, the whole works that I went back to school. And I have to tell you, the minute I walked in that school, immediately they acknowledged me immediately. I was greeted. And, um, the both administrators were available to talk to me at that point. The counselors were available to talk to me at that point. And so, because I had gone from a Latina, the mom to now a business woman in a suit, and, and, you know, dressed professionally, I was greeted differently. I was treated differently that day. My daughter, um, her, her schedule was changed within like 15 minutes. Right.And so that's when I realized I have to step into this, this world. I, I need to change. I, I need to change systems. I need to be able to be part of a system that I can change. And so that's when I went back to school and got my, um, my teaching certificate. And so, you know, here it is a, a, an act of racism, um, propelled me to change, um, what I was doing professionally.Danielle (19:16):I felt all the feels listening to that story. Cause it's not unfamiliar to my family. Right,Right. I, I remember you in my, in the days when we were in elementary school and you were an advocate and I think teacher and what was your, you had a different kind of like more leadership role at that point.Martha Little (19:37):Y yeah, I was a English language coordinator, so I supported, um, our English language learners and families.Danielle (19:44):Right. And I remember feeling so cared for by you and understood. And so to hear the backstory of where that comes from, it making use of that experience in a way that impacted my family, it's, it's, it's really inspiring.Martha Little (20:03):Thank you. Thank you. Yeah. You know, I think it's, it's, um, our experiences, um, if we use our experiences both positive and negative, um, to, to create change in us and around us, um, I, I think that, um, we can, we can grow, um, both, um, you know, individually and, and as a society. I mean, I, I don't necessarily, I don't necessarily think that, um, or I don't look at all experiences as, um, these horrible, um, instances that, that, um, cause trauma. They do. Some of them do cause trauma. But in this case, um, that was a pitiable point for me because in this case it allowed me to, to, um, to now step into a role that that helps others. Mm-hmm. . Um, and by helping others, I'm helping myself because, um, the, the work I do truly feeds my soulAnd the money's good, but the work I do truly feeds my soul. And, and I feel like, um, that that very negative experience, um, that still sometimes, um, you know, when when it surfaces, it still still angers me. It still creates emotions, um, or, or, you know, brings these emotions out. Um, but taking that and, and then doing something with it, and that's kind of, that's our, uh, Latina heritage that's being Latino that does that from, from the moment we were little, we were always taught that, um, to be grateful. Mm-hmm. , you know, and it was always, and it didn't matter what it was, whether it was a good thing or a bad thing. I remember my mom always saying, This experience is gonna help you grow. And, and it's that, um, you know, that they instill in us this love for, um, for God. And they instill in us this, this understanding that our hardships and, um, our experiences are God given so that we can get better so that we can grow to be better humans. And, um, and so I think that that's just part of our culture, right? Mm-hmm. , we take all of this stuff and we do something with it mm-hmm. , um, and, um, I don't know. It's, it's a beautiful thing to, to be able to think back at everything that I was taught as a child now is helping me as an adult.Danielle (22:49):Where do you see, when you think of those experiences as a child, and now you work with families in our community, and I, I think a lot of immigrant families, right? Mm-hmm. . Yeah. Where do you see, how do you see that changing in the last few years? Even your work through the pandemic or with increased, I think, frankly, since the 2016 election focused on our community and direct expressions of hate towards our community. Like what, what have you seen in your own work with immigrant families?Martha Little (23:25):Um, you know, I, I think that, um, when I think about what our, our families experienced, um, during those four years, um, those very hard political years for, for our communities, um, it, it took me back to when I came to this country, when I, when I first arrived here, um, the signs on the, on the, in the businesses, on the business, um, you know, the doors and the, um, the rentals. Um, and, and I shared the story before, but they, um, they said, No dogs, no Mexicans. And I remember as a, as a, like, I think I must have been six, six, just, just about to turn seven. I remember how that impacted me. Um, this idea that I, I, they didn't want me mm-hmm. , and not just that, but I was being compared to an animal mm-hmm. , right? And so I was in that same category.And, um, and now I tell you what, I have a dog now, and I love our dog. She's part of our family. But back then, um, my my understanding was that I was being compared to, to an animal and I wasn't wanted. And, um, and so having experienced that as a young child, um, and, you know, learning English, cuz I, I, I didn't speak English. I, um, I remember, you know, constantly being reminded to speak English, don't speak Spanish, don't speak Spanish, speak English. And, and constantly being reminded, um, you know, that I didn't, didn't belong here. And then fast forward to, um, you know, this, this very, um, difficult political time for, for, um, immigrants. Um, again, it felt like, again, we don't belong here. You know, we didn't see the signs, but we heard the message constantly, constantly, you know, this messaging that we are criminals.We are not wanted, you know, we need to go back. And, um, and so, um, for our families, um, um, 2016, I remember there was this great fear within our community. Um, they were afraid to go out to their homes. They were afraid to step out, um, the kids. Um, we had so many absences because, um, the kids were afraid to go to school and come home and not find their loved ones at home, or, or they knew their mom and dad would be safe. But what about their, the, or their theo or, I mean, it just, it was, it was heartbreaking to, to see this. And so, um, as, I mean as, because I, I had the role as an EL coordinator. Um, we partnered with, um, with Kayak, um, Kitsap Immigrant Assistant Center. And we brought in, um, we brought in folks to, to talk to our community, um, created safe spaces for them, um, and then, um, brought 'em in to talk to our community about what they could do and what their rights were.Um, and we also brought in, um, you know, the, um, different, um, people from, um, from our communities. We had police department, sheriff, and highway patrol. I mean, we brought in just a lot of folks to, to say, You are safe. We, we are going to take care of you. It's okay to call 9 1 1. It's okay to, to get services. We are here to protect you. And, um, it was a pretty beautiful thing to see, um, our community kind of wrap around our, our Hispanic community and say, You're safe. You're welcome. Now, that's not everyone. Yeah. That, that was a handful of, of folks. Um, but the difference that made, um, for our families, um, when the school districts, um, you know, sent the message to families that their children were safe at school mm-hmm. that only parents could pick them up, the ice would not be able to go to the school and take their children.I mean, to, to share that message with our, our, um, you know, families that was crucial to helping them feel safe. And, um, and so I think that my role in that really was about partnering with, with our extended community, reaching out and saying, Hey, I can't do this alone and we have a need. And still, And then we all just came together. And, and that's really, I mean, like you and I, this work we're doing right here, and then you inviting me to, to this conference, I mean, that's all about partnerships and, and, um, it's all about, um, you know, reaching out and supporting each other. Mm-hmm. . So, um, I think that right now our families feel a little, a little safer, but I think that, um, there is so much hatred now that is, um, being spewed publicly now. I mean, I don't think that, I don't think that there's been a great change.It's just that it was, it was not, it was not out in the open mm-hmm. . Now it is. I mean, hatred is just being viewed everywhere. You hear it. And so I think our families are feeling safer, but I also think that our students, our kids, um, I, I imagine they feel that same, um, disconnect or that same, um, this awareness that they're not wanted. And I imagine that they, they felt maybe what I did when I first came to this country and this, you know, sense of, um, I don't know, not understanding why, why don't you want me, What's wrong with me? Mm-hmm. , that's really the question is what is wrong with me? Why, why, why am I not wanted? Why am I not welcome? Mm-hmm. . So yeah, it's a lot.Danielle (29:13):Yeah, it is a lot. And I mean, it clearly, you know, you've navigated some complex systems and reached across and made partnerships on behalf of folks who aren't able to make those asks themselves maybe for fear, or maybe there was prior threat. Um, but I, what I really hear is that you have built networks and, and, and I think those are likely built in relationships. I know me contacting you is a feeling like, Oh, I think Martha's my friend, I think I know she would listen, so, or I know she might enjoy this or that, so I could invite you. Right. So I really feel that's, that's also part of our culture, like to network and to say like, Hey, I, I don't know what I'm doing. Like, can you help me? Right.Martha Little:Yes. Exactly. Exactly. Um, we are, um, very much about relationships. Um, so, so much. Um, and I, I feel like we embrace each other even before we truly get to know each other. You know, there's this instant connected-ness instant thing that connects us. Um, I was in Puerto Rico like four years ago, I think. And um, and it's like I felt the community just accepted as a minute. We got there, we were at the beach just hanging out as a family. And, and I had a lady, um, never, I mean, never. I didn't know anyone there. And she came up and she's like, Nana, and she gave me a hug and this, and then, and she says banana. So she just gives me all these bananas from her home, from her banana trees. And then we would go out into old San Juan. And the same thing, like, someone would come up and just talk to us and, and come in.And then they would, you know, share whatever it is that they were, um, eating or doing. And, and it's just our culture. We embrace each other. And I shared that with a colleague of mine. And, and then later on she was telling someone else, she says, Yeah, Martha said that she went to Puerto Rico and everybody was hugging her. And I said, No, you missed the whole point. When I say that I was embraced, Yes, oftentimes I was hugged, I was embraced. But mostly it was, it was a spiritual, um, connection. It was a, a cultural embracement. Like from the minute I got there, I belonged and we were, we were a family. We were, you know, friends, you know, we were, um, we just had this connection and, um, and I feel like as Latinos, um, it's just something that happens. We gravitate towards each other and embrace each other. We are, you know, we are P mediaDanielle: Yeah. And I, I just, when I hear that, you know, I'm like, I, I feel warm inside. I I've been telling this story, you know, Julie's 15 and she, we were down in Mexico in Guadalajara for, I don't know, three weeks or whatever in the area for like three weeks. And part of that time, we hadn't been there for eight years with some of our family. And I think we were in Guadalajara maybe two days. And Dooley came up to me and said to me, Mom, why haven't I been here in eight years? And why do I feel like this is home and back home doesn't feel like home. I don't have the feeling. And I, and I was like, thinking about it. I was like, Well, well, I know it's in your dna, . And, and also it's the fact that the neighbor hasn't seen Luis in eight years and they have kids, and now those kids come over to say hi. Or there's a sense of, Oh, Julie's here. This is, this is good. Yeah. Without even knowing who she is, Right. There's a sense of like, Yes, of course you're here and we love you. And, and it was more than just the fact that we were seeing family. It, I think it was, it felt like the smell and the texture and the street and, and the, I think how kids say today, like it was the vibe, right? Yes.Martha Little (33:22):, Yes, yes. There is something, there is something in the air. Um, my mom used to say that, um, it's in our blood. Um, and do you know what ATO is? Yeah. And she said, she's like, There's something in our blood. She says, Some people have a toilet, which is very thick blood, and it does not allow them to, to weave in and outta spaces and make connections. And then she said, and then, um, we have this light blood sang, you know, is what she used to say, sang, that allows us to just weed in and out as spaces that the blood just flows in and out. And it allows us to make those connections. And I just love that, that, you know, I could just picture this in my brain is like, and so she would sometimes, if we went into, um, new spaces and if we were being shy, she would turn and she would say, Miha. And so just that reminder that that, you know, let, let your blood, let your soul let who you are just, just flow, just flow in and out of spaces and make those connections because the connections. And she used to also say there's, that the only thing we will take with us when we leave this earth is our memories and our love and the connections we've made with people.It's not everything else that we acquire that stays. And so, I mean, that's always stayed with me. Um, you know, that, that, yeah. The Nemo sang the normal, all of this beautiful stuff that is just part of our culture.Danielle: I hear just the underpinnings of how I don't like the spirituality, the faith. Yes. Like kind of GERDs up for a sense of respect and mutuality. Yes. And of course, our cultures have been interrupted by traumas, and we don't always respond in these ways and Right. Our families are broken too. Right. But there's something underneath that that says, we can come back. This is what we can come back to.Martha Little (35:40):Yes, yes, yes. I think that, um, it, it, um, you know, from when we are young, um, you know, everything that we learn and do is grounded in our faith and, um, and, you know, our love for, for each other. And, um, and I think that that's what allows us to, to be, um, maybe a little more resilient. Um, because goodness know, we've experienced a lot. Um, we have a lot of, um, inter intergenerational trauma and we have a lot of, a lot of experiences that, um, could really have a strong impact on us. And, and, and some experiences have, I know that I, I, you know, I still have to process and deal with, with some things, but, um, but it's this, being grounded in this faith that, um, today might be difficult, but it's gonna get better. And we just need to reach out and we need to be there for each other, you know? So, and I think that that also drives my, my work, um, is just understanding that that, um, today may be difficult, but there's hope. I can see it at the end, and I just need to keep moving forward. And there's hope that things will change.Danielle (37:00):it's a really beautiful picture. Yeah,Yeah. When, when you, um, as we're winding down on a time, I'm curious, like what books are you reading right now? What are, what are, Yeah. And then what are you listening to and who are, what's inspiring you? Kinda like these three questions.Martha Little (37:20):Oh, um, I just, actually, I just finished, um, reading. It's, it's, um, it's, um, let's see, it's fiction. And I, I'm pulling it up right now cuz I wanna be able to, um, to call it out. Um, so I'm reading, um, texture teaching right now or listening to, and we'll start what happened to you pretty soon because I want to, um, I, I need to understand how to support our students and our families and my own children, um, how to help them work through the trauma they are experiencing. Mm-hmm. , I need to understand. Um, I, I need, I mean, I have an awareness now and now I need to know how to help them through this. And so, um, so I've, I, let's see. I'm, I'm just trying to find, It was really good. I, I think your kids would really like it. Um, I think that they would, um, don't this stuff. Don't ask me where I'm from.Danielle (38:22):Oh, we have that book at home.Martha Little (38:23):Oh, it was so good. And, and it's, I mean, it's juvenile fiction, but I, I've really enjoyed it. And then, um, just before that, I read for Brown Girls with Sharp Edges and thatOh, you're gonna love it. Like, I could not put it down. could not put it down. And so those are the ones that I just finished, um, listening to. And then Texture Teaching is, is what I'm working on right now. I've read, um, uh, see, uh, How to Heal Racial Trauma, I think it was. And that's, uh, the, the Racial Healing Handbook.But that one just, it peaked my interest to the point where now I have to, I have to know more. I have to learn more. And so, so yeah. Um, I mean, I, there's a lot for me to learn a lot from me to doDanielle (39:18):Who are, what's inspiring you right now?Martha Little (39:22):I think our youth are inspiring me right now. Um, I was just at a, um, Latino Student Union meeting and this group of Latino high schoolers got together and, um, they were very unhappy with some things that happened in, um, in the school. And they got together and they wrote the statement and they read it out loud to an administrator. I was fortunate enough to be there, to be invited. And, um, and I'll tell you what, they inspired me last year. I, I got to meet with our black student union students and they inspired me. Mm-hmm. , it's the kids right now. They, um, they are ready to do so much more than we were ready to do with their age. Mm-hmm. , they are just, um, they want change and they're not afraid to speak up and say, this is wrong. And so they inspire me, like if, if I can be in their spaces, I don't know if you ever feel this, you walk into a space and you're with kids and you're listening to them, and all of a sudden you feel this energy, you feel energized. And I'm just like, Oh yes, give me some of that energy so that then I can continue this, this fight, this work, you know? And so, so I would say it's not like one, it's like collectively our youth inspire me right now. They are doing so much more than I ever thought of doing. I was afraid of doing, I think. And so they're inspirational.Danielle (40:56):I love that. Well, if someone is listening and they wanna reach out to you, is that an option? Or are you on social media, or how would someone find youMartha Little (41:06):So I am not on social media because I work so hard during the day and go to all these meetings in the evening. So I, I just need to be able to step away from it. And so I, I am not on social media and my kids tell me I ought to be, but I'm not. Um, but they can always, um, I mean, they can always, um, email me, um, if they have questions. I, I work for central kids have school district and so they can always email me. Um, and um, yeah, I think that that's probably the best way because until I am brave enough to go on social media, um, or until I decide that I am ready to give up some of my free time to be on social media, um, it's gonna have to be email.Danielle (41:52):Well, thank you.Martha Little (41:54):Yeah. Thank you for the opportunity to, to meet and to share.
Getting suprised & Cobra cumbias by deacon and the dicknose
Alonso's cut: A Patricia Muchachita Del Oriente Vacilando Con Ayahuasca Sacalo Sacalo Cariñito Sonido Amazonico Elsa Ya Se Ha Muerto Mi Abuelo La Danza de los Mirlos Jenny's cut: A Patricia Sacalo Sacalo Elsa El Milagro Verde Linda Munquita Mi Moreno Rebelde Ryan's cut: Muchachita del Oriente Vacilando Con Ayahuasca Carinito Ya Se Ha Muerto mi Abuelo Sonido Amazonico El Milagro Verde Mi Morena Rebelde Me Robaron Mi Runa Mula La Danza de Los Mirlos Chris's cut: Sonido Amazonico Cariñito Ya Se Ha Muerto Mi Abuelo Muchachita del Oriente Elsa El Guapo Mi Morena Rebelde Si Me Quieres Me Robaron Mi Runa Mula Intro: Spaghetti Western by StickfigureOutro: Western Firefight 2 by Cullah
Here is another one! Adding more to this Open Format Mix series that many can enjoy. Especially, if you're a music lover in multiple genres. This mix series, “Assorted Flavors”, is basically a crazy freestyle session streamed & recorded live where anything goes. No planning, no set playlist, no themes, no favorite genres…just a bunch of good music crammed into an hour. You'll find a few new Pop hits, heavy in Old School Hip-Hop, uptempo Remixes, Cumbias and a splash of Country. It's crazy but hope y'all enjoy it. Please, feel free to use this at a party and share it to your friends. Peace & Love!FOLLOW: facebook.com/themixlab | twitter.com/themixlab | facebook.com/djFreshVince | twitter.com/djFreshVince | mixcloud.com/djFreshVince | instagram.com/djfreshvince | twitch.tv/djfreshvince**ALTERNATE DOWNLOAD: https://www.mediafire.com/file/xmc4rflgk6553y4/DJ+Fresh+Vince+-+Assorted+Flavors+4.mp3/file
#Madonna sorprendió a todos al aparecer #baliandocumbia y conquistó el corazón de los #latinos. No cabe duda de que Madonna siempre da de qué hablar. Esta vez se dejó conquistar por un trend de #TikTok y la pudimos ver como nunca: disfrutando de una #cumbia bien rebajada.
Una sesión de baile con base en estilos fácilmente identificables. Así el programa lo hemos dividido en cuatro partes, en la primera hacemos un repaso por bailables de muy variados estilos en el que oiremos esencias de swing, hindú, electro latino y notas andinas. La segunda la centramos en torno a Cumbias. La tercera se deja llevar por sonidos balcánicos. Y la cuarta con predominio de Ska.
Hoy nos sentimos un poco niños, pues desde el Valle de Valdivielso, en Burgos, llega Ajayu Dúo, formado por Fernando Pulido y Rocío Gordillo, con ritmos de todo el mundo para mostrarlos a los más pequeños. Cumbias, chacareras, jotas, charros y mucho más en una fusión de culturas para encontrar caminos de entendimiento entre todos los pueblos del planeta y que los niños y niñas entiendan el respeto a la diversidad. En la segunda parte de La Tarataña, seguimos desgranando el disco “Balas y Fuego”, de Vallarna, para hablar de su presentación en el Bolao Folk de Cóbreces (Cantabria), además de anunciar también conciertos de Fetén Fetén, Lorena Álvarez, Atairaos y el curso de Música Folk Ibérica que organiza la Escuela de Música Creativa de Madrid en sus programas de verano. Véase el rico menú del sábado: Ajayu, “África”, “Arbolito”, “La abubilla”, “Colombia”, “Castilla” e “India”; Fetén Fetén, “Solamente tú” (con Isaac & Nora); Vallarna, “Balas y fuego”, “Corridos” y “Voy caminando”, Atairaos, “Ceremonial de Mogarraz”; El Naán, “Cuando el ruido regrese”; y Lorena Álvarez y sus rondadores, “Dos pájaros en un almendro”. Escuchar audio
Para Todos que le Encantan Las Cumbias Bueno Aqui Estan Estas Para Que Disfruten El Dia.. También Estoy En ( iTunes… ) Y (SoundCloud ) Es Completamente Gratis Para Escuchar…. Suscribir ti, pone un like, comparte,,sigueme…Clic a tu NotificacioTn para que recibas cuando suba música nueva que tengan un Buen Dia.. ‘'Cada Viernes Nuevos Mix.''
Un Poquito De Todo Para Que Disfrutes Tus Cumbias... También Estoy En ( iTunes… ) Y (SoundCloud ) Es Completamente Gratis Para Escuchar…. Suscribir ti, pone un like, comparte,,sigueme…Clic a tu NotificacioTn para que recibas cuando suba música nueva que tengan un Buen Dia.. ‘'Cada Viernes Nuevos Mix.''
This week's episode we dive into my Salvadoran roots with some Cumbia! enjoy this mix while cleaning, working out or riding around town. Thanks for tuning in and I hope you enjoy!See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
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DISFRUTA ESTE EPISODIO, LLENODE CUMBIAS PARA SABOREAR.
ON THIS EPISODE DJ JONNY T AND DJ SKRATCH E MIX ALTERNATIVE ROCK,HIP HOP, CUMBIAS,REGGAETON
En el episodio de hoy escucharemos un tema muy interesante de las cumbias , por lo que surgen algunas preguntas ¿Bailar es pecado? ¿Las cumbias cristianas están permitidas? Estas y otras preguntas surgen en este episodio y David hace confesar al Pastor Rafa un suceso de su vida pasada, así también continuamos leyendo Gálatas y platicando al respecto.
Para el fin de año de 1979, el cantante colombiano Rodolfo Aicardi grabó con su orquesta Típica R.A.7 la recordada canción "Tabaco y ron", la cual fue incluida en el álbum “Qué chévere… Rodolfo con Los Hispanos”. Así la escuché yo... La canción de Rodolfo Aicardi es una nueva versión de la hermosa cumbia “Tabaco y ron” que compusiera y grabará originalmente el arpista venezolano Manuel J. de la Roche, quien desde 1964 está radicado en la ciudad de Villavicencio, Colombia. Autor Manuel J. De La Roche Tabaco y ron - Rodolfo Aicardi con la Típica R.A.7 (1979) Qué chévere… Rodolfo con Los Hispanos – Artista invitado: La Típica R.A.7 álbum (1979) Tabaco y ron – Manuel J. De La Roche (1979) 12 Cumbias de oro álbum (1979) ___________________ “Así la escuché yo…” Temporada: 1 Episodio: 69 Sergio Productions Cali – Colombia
El viernes de desmadre las #Caseritas se lo toman en serio y como es un día para ir a bailar, hablamos de las mejores cumbias para vacilar, recibimos las recomendaciones del caserismo y sobre todo, lo pasamos excelente.