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Metiendo Mano! (transl. "Hard at work!") is the debut studio album by Puerto Rican-American trombonist and singer Willie Colón and Panamanian singer-songwriter Rubén Blades, released on October 7, 1977, through Fania Records. [4]
de tu pueblo figuran la grata armonía de dones de paz; en el cuerno colmado de frutos, la bondad prodigiosa del suelo, y en la palma que se alza hacia el cielo, ¡heroísmo, virtud, libertad! II El dorado esplendor de tus playas es promesa de pan laborioso, como es tu pasado glorioso, de un futuro de pródigo bien; la más bella porción de ...
El pueblo unido jamás será vencido!" (Latin American Spanish: [el ˈpweβlo wˈniðo xaˈma(s)seˈɾa βenˈsiðo]; English: "The people united will never be defeated") is a Chilean protest song, whose music was composed by Sergio Ortega Alvarado and the text written in conjunction with the Quilapayún band. [1]
The most well known song of the album is Quilapayún & Sergio Ortega’s ¡El pueblo unido jamás será vencido!, originally composed as a march for the Popular Unity government; after the September 11, 1973 military coup it became the international anthem of the Chilean resistance.
A Man And His Music: Poeta del Pueblo also known as Poeta del Pueblo is the fourth compilation album by Rubén Blades released on March 11, 2008. [1] Being together with his album Anthology released on March 27, [2] 2012 similar compilations only that this compilation has more successes in his career in Fania, the album contains songs by Blades in his stay at Fania from 1974 (with Willie ...
In the celebrations marking the return of democracy in 1990 at Santiago's Estadio Nacional Julio Martínez Prádanos, the anthem was played in its present melody, raised to F Major, which is the original melody of the second anthem by Carnicer, but using the 1847 lyrics as text, save for the original chorus of the 1819 anthem. This was the ...
Por Amor a Mi Pueblo (Eng.: "For Love of My Town") is the sixteenth and final studio album released by Los Bukis on May 2, 1995. [ 1 ] The album was certified gold in the United States by the RIAA .
Official Quilapayún logo. Quilapayún originated in 1965 when Julio Numhauser and the brothers Julio and Eduardo Carrasco formed a folk music trio, which they simply called "the three bearded men" (viz. Quila-Payún) in the Mapuche language (viz. Mapudungun – the language of the people native to the region that is now the south of Chile, the Araucanians). [1]