Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Santeria" is a ballad [5] by American ska punk band Sublime, released on their self-titled third album (1996). The song was released as a single on January 7, 1997. Although the song was released after the death of lead singer Bradley Nowell, "Santeria" along with "What I Got" are often regarded as the band's signature songs.
The single was produced by Mango and Nabález, and mixed by Mosty. It is influenced byreggaeton, with the use of compressed voices. [3] Rosenthal said that the song is "an invitation for all women to feel like queens in their spaces and find courage not to go through harmful experiences, it is a way to make the work of colleagues visible, and to create spaces for female references to exist and ...
Praise songs are sung for the oricha, [317] with specific songs associated with particular deities. [318] These may be sung a cappella or with instrumental accompaniment. [319] The lead singer at such ceremonies is known as an akpwón. [320] During the opening verse of the song, the akpwón may break into a personal prayer. [321]
Aganjú - orisha that was a warrior king, walked with a sword as a staff, and is associated with fire. He is not associated with volcanoes in Yorùbáland in West Africa, contrary to what is believed in Cuban-style practice of orisa.
Eleguá (Legba) is known in the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Colombia, Cuba, Puerto Rico, and Mexico as the orisha and "owner" of caminos, or roads and paths.Elegua is also known as a “trickster” and is portrayed as both being very young and mischievous as well as very old and wise, encompassing the varying paths and phases of fate and life.
A recording of the songs and rhythms of ten Orishas (Deities) of Santeria in New York. Studio album by . Milton Cardona. Released: 1986: Recorded: 1985: Label:
Èṣù is a pivotal Òrìṣà/Irúnmọlẹ̀ in the Yoruba spirituality or Yoruba religion known as ìṣẹ̀ṣe. Èṣù is a prominent primordial Divinity (a delegated Irúnmọlẹ̀ sent by the Olódùmarè) who descended from Ìkọ̀lé Ọ̀run, and the Chief Enforcer of natural and divine laws – he is the Deity in charge of law enforcement and orderliness. [1]
Héctor Juan Pérez Martínez (September 30, 1946 – June 29, 1993), [3] better known as Héctor Lavoe, was a Puerto Rican salsa singer. [4] Lavoe is considered to be possibly the best and most important singer and interpreter in the history of salsa music because he helped to establish the popularity of this musical genre in the decades of 1960s, 1970s and 1980s.