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Singer Gabriel "El Gaby" García replaced Orozco 1993 - Todo Corazón (album) 1994 - De la Mano con el Pueblo; 1995 - Lo Nuestro (vallenato album) Jean Carlos Centeno and Jorgito Celedon became lead singers 1996 - A su Gusto; 1997 - Seguimos por lo Alto; 1998 - 2000 (vallenato album) In 1999 singer Jorgito Celedon quits the group, replaced by ...
In 1992 participated along Poncho Cotes Jr in a song contest in the Colombian town of San Juan del Cesar, in La Guajira. [2] The song "Un ángel mas en el cielo" of his authorship was a dedication to his role model singer Rafael Orozco Maestre, then recently deceased, and lead singer of the Binomio de Oro de America vallenato group. [3]
The Vallenato Legend Festival (Spanish: Festival de la Leyenda Vallenata) is one of the most important musical festivals in Colombia. The festival features a vallenato music contests for best performer of accordion , caja vallenata and guacharaca , as well as piqueria (battle of lyrics) and best song.
La Nueva Ola refers to the new generation of vallenato groups and orchestras that have created a distinctive sound for themselves while keeping some of the essences of their predecessors. Kaleth Morales is considered the leading artist of this young wave of vallenato musical groups, even after his death following a car accident on August 24, 2005.
The music genre Vallenato ("musica vallenata"). A radio Station named La Vallenata part of the Colombian radio network Caracol Radio This page was last edited on 19 ...
The Latin Grammy Award for Best Cumbia/Vallenato Album is an honor presented annually at the Latin Grammy Awards, a ceremony that recognizes excellence and creates a wider awareness of cultural diversity and contributions of Latin recording artists in the United States and internationally. [1]
Aniceto Molina Aguirre (17 April 1939 – 30 March 2015) was a Colombian cumbia singer-songwriter and accordionist who began playing the instrument at the age of 12. [1] [2] His career lasted for more than four decades.
The 1980s saw the major record labels such as RCA/Ariola, CBS, and EMI form their own Latin music divisions. [1] By 1985, Billboard noted that the Latin music industry saw increase in awareness from major corporations such as Coca-Cola promoting Julio Iglesias and Pepsi advertising Menudo.