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This is a list of the best-selling albums in Argentina based on CAPIF certification. Albums are listed in order of certification (highest to lowest), and order of release date (earliest to most recent). This list contains any type of album, including studio, greatest hits, compilation, various artists, soundtrack, DVDs and remix.
The winners formed the child musical group KtrasK, with whom she toured all over Argentina and Uruguay and visited the most prominent Argentinian media outlets. [11] The group was nominated to several music and TV awards, including Premios Gardel awards [ 12 ] and Martín Fierro awards and their albums gained gold and platinum certifications in ...
Celebracion de alabanza (En vivo) CanZion 1994 Lo Mejor de Marcos: 1994 ¡Alabadle! (En vivo) 1995 Recordando... Una misma senda: 1995 Vicente Montaño: Tiempo de Cambiar: 1995 Rudy Rodríguez "Aliento de adoración" 1996 Venció (En vivo) 1996 Es Navidad: 1997 Israel: 1997 Canticos de alabanza y adoración para cumplidores de promesas ...
Also of great value are the songs performed by Lola Kiepja, known as "the last Selk'nam", compiled by Anne Chapman in two records produced by the Musée de l'Homme in Paris, under the title Selk'nam chants of Tierra del Fuego, Argentina (in Spanish: Cantos selk’nam de Tierra del Fuego, Argentina), some of which can be heard on the Internet. [18]
Chacarera is a traditional folk dance and musical style developed in the rural northwest of Argentina, namely in Santiago del Estero, with both African and European influences. [ 23 ] [ 24 ] The name chacarera has its origins in the Andean term chacra , which refers to farms or agricultural fields.
Roberto Sánchez-Ocampo (August 19, 1945 – January 4, 2010), better known by his stage names Sandro or Sandro de América, was an Argentine singer and actor. He is considered a pioneer of Argentine rock for being one of the first rock artists to sing in Spanish in Latin America.
In Argentina, the movement was founded under the name Nuevo Cancionero and formally codified on 11 February 1963 when fourteen artists met in Mendoza, Argentina to sign the Manifiesto Fundacional de Nuevo Cancionero. Present were both musical artists and poet writers. The Argentine movement especially was a musico-literal.
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