George Stolz

Goya and Madrid


Shamik Bag

India


Mel Campbell

Australia


Nick Frisch

Beijing, China


James Hendicott

Dublin, Ireland


Eve Hyman

Buenos Aires, Argentina


Jessica Hundley

Los Angeles, California, USA


Alexandra Ivanoff

Istanbul, Turkey


Peter Margasak

Chicago, Illinois, USA


Miles Marshall Lewis

Paris, France


Siobhan O'Leary

Berlin, Germany


Alina Simone

Russia


Meakin Armstrong

Southern USA


Lea Feinstein

Munch and Olso


Kristin Hohenadel

Van Gogh and Arles


Barbie Latza Nadeau

Caravaggio and Rome


Sandra Smallenburg

Vermeer and Delft


Mikael Awake

Ethiopia


Gemma Blackwood

Australia/New Zealand


Scarlet Cheng

Hong Kong


Eija Margit Niskanen

Japan


Mikael Awake

Iran


Elise Jongeun Yoon

Korea


Lee Middleton

Africa


Jose Lustre Jr.

Thailand/Morocco/ Puerto Rico


Andrea Chignoli

Argentina


Jason Anderson

Canada


Alvaro Ceppi

Chile


Nisha Gopalan

New York


Enrique Ramirez

Mexico City/Scandinavia


Liz Brown

San Francisco/Italy


Julien Sévéon

France


Tom Beer

UK


Laurel Maury

Russia


Pelin Turgut

Turkey


Shari Kizirian

Spain


Hannah Tucker

Germany


Museyon: Music + Travel
Argentina
October 23rd, 2009

Discovering: Cumbia

Zizek Club, Buenos Aires, Argentina

Zizek Club, Buenos Aires, Argentina


In Music+Travel Worldwide from Musyeon Guides, Eve Hyman takes you on a tour of Buenos Aires in search of the city’s cumbia scene. But what is cumbia, anyway? From folk music to the street to the club, check out our three-step cumbia crash course, after the jump…
 

Cumbia was born when Guinean slaves brought cumbe folk music to Colombia from Africa in the 17th century. Since then it’s migrated throughout Latin America, and today cumbia’s folkier variants are the de facto soundtrack of Mexico and Peru. But in Buenos Aires cumbia has taken a different direction. In the 1980s, synthesizers sent the sound to the club, and today the new cumbia is the dominant dance music in Buenos Aires from cumbia villera — the genre’s gangster rap — to newer funky styles. Check out how.
 
Step 1 Get Dirty: Damas Gratis
Cumbia goes gangster when Damas Gratis introduces cumbia villera, “shantytown cumbia” in 2000. Like its distant cousin gangster rap, the sound glorifies sex, drugs and violence.
 

 
Step 2 Get Funky: El Hijo de la Cumbia
Artists such as El Hijo de la Cumbia take the roots of cumbia and mix in reggae and hip-hop to create a danceable sound with a widespread appeal.
 

 
Step 3 Get Weird: Chancha via Circuito
Things get experimental with acts like Chancha via Circuito, who mixes traditional Andean music and minimalist electronic sounds.
 

 
Image courtesy of ZZK Records and Club Zizek, our favorite spot for new cumbia in Buenos Aires. Check back for more on ZZK coming soon to Museyon.

Category : Argentina, Blog, Museyon: Music + Travel