Tag: Latin American Music

  • Tropical Heatwave Radio Show on WPRB

    Tropical Heatwave Radio Show on WPRB

    We’re having a heat waaaave… a tropical heat wave…

    Only days after our first taste of snow, temperatures are poised to rise into the 60s.

    This Thursday morning on WPRB, we’ll take our cue from Irving Berlin and ride the wave into the tropics. We’ll have music affiliated in some way or another with Cuba, Jamaica, Puerto Rico, Venezuela, and Brazil – broadly speaking, the Caribbean, the Amazon, and Latin America. Some of it will be in the form of picture postcards by European and (North) American composers; much it will be by artists who hail from equatorial climes.

    Join me on my tropical estancia, tomorrow morning from 6 to 11 EST, on WPRB 103.3 FM and at wprb.com. We need more cow bell, on Classic Ross Amico.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZCnJ_8Z5Nb4

  • Tropical Heat Wave Music Escape

    Tropical Heat Wave Music Escape

    So long, Old Man Winter – at least for the time being.

    We’ll have an abundance of bananas and bongos this morning, as we travel south to equatorial climes, during what will seem in the Northeastern United States like a veritable heat wave. Too late for Indian Summer and too early for the Groundhog, it nevertheless provides us with some incentive to don our beachcombers and Bermuda shorts, musically speaking. We’ll enjoy a full morning of music evocative of the Caribbean, the Amazon, and Latin America. Some of the works will be by European and (North) American composers; most will be by those native to the regions.

    For those of you listening from outside the Northeast, under very different weather conditions, consider yourself snow birds, bound for the tropics.

    Join me as I crack coconuts with a machete this morning, from 6 to 11 EST, on WPRB 103.3 FM and at wprb.com. We’re having a heat waaave… a tropical heat wave…, on Classic Ross Amico.

  • Inocente Carreño Venezuelan Composer Dies at 96

    Inocente Carreño Venezuelan Composer Dies at 96

    This just in from the I-Had-No-Idea-He-Was-Still-Alive Department:

    Venezuelan composer Inocente Carreño has died at the age of 96. Though you have to dig deep in order to find much information about him in English, he was regarded as Venezuela’s national composer. His brother, Francisco, was a noted specialist in folklore, and the two used to play guitar with their sisters, as Inocente explored the popular forms of joropos, meringues, waltzes, rumbas, tangos, and boleros.

    He attained prominence as both a composer and an educator, founding a music school and advocating for the arts. Over the course of his illustrious career, he was showered with awards, while he wrote symphonies, symphonic poems and other orchestral works, as well as vocal, chamber and instrumental music.

    In 1954, he composed his most famous work, “Margariteña.” A tribute to his homeland, the main theme was inspired by the folk song “Margarita is a tear.” Other traditional melodies are woven into the work’s impressionistic tapestry, so that the piece is regarded as a classic of musical nationalism.

    Carreño remained active into his 90s. Descansar bien, mi amigo.


    Carreño championed by The Dude:

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