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La Sonora Dinamita is a Colombian [1] and Mexican [2] [3] [4] musical group that plays cumbia, a Tropical music genre from Colombia but popular throughout Latin America. As one of the first cumbia groups to reach international success, it is credited with helping to popularize the genre throughout Latin America and the world.
Ritmo! is a cumbia album from the Colombian musical group Sonora Dinamita.It was released on the Discos Fuentes label.. The album has been described as "a fundamental pillar in the development and dissemination of Colombian cumbia."
Las 30 Cumbias Más Pegadas, Vol. 2 (2003) Las 30 Cumbias Más Pegadas (English: The 30 Best Cumbias ) is a compilation album featuring music from Los Angeles Azules , Los Askis, Rayito Colombiano, Grupo Latino, Grupo Maracuya, Los Llayras, Mr. Chivo, Aniceto Molina, Super Grupo G, La Tropa Vallenata, Los Vallenatos, Yahari, among others.
La Sonora Dinamita [13] La Sonora Ponceña [14] Los Corraleros de Majagual [15] Los Llopis [16] Los Wawancó [17] Margarita la Diosa de la Cumbia [18] Gonzalo Martinez [19] Aniceto Molina [20] Carmen Rivero [21] Pedro Salcedo & His Orchestra [22] Tropical Panamá [23] Charlie Zaa [24] Yuri [25]
Cumbia is commonly known for having many subgenres from different countries which contributes to the different dance styles known. Cumbia can be referred to as a folk dance while also being known globally as a street dance. To better understand what the dances of cumbia resemble it's better to know the basics of the dance.
Cumbia (Spanish pronunciation:) is a folkloric genre and dance from Colombia. [1] [2] [3]The cumbia is the most representative dance of the coastal region in Colombia, and is danced in pairs with the couple not touching one another as they display the amorous conquest of a woman by a man. [4]
"La Colegiala" ("the collegian", or "girl student" in Spanish) is a Latin iconic song composed in 1975 by Walter León Aguilar, leader of the Peruvian cumbia ensemble Los Ilusionistas, and made hugely popular in the early 1980s by the Colombian singer Rodolfo Aicardi, crediting it to Rodolfo y su Tipica RA7.
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.