A danceable cumbia or salsa track is mixed with other sounds, everything from electronica to rap. |
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On the coast, the style of music is the cumbia, played with flutes and drums. |
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The most popular musical form in El Salvador is the cumbia, a style that originated in Colombia. |
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Ecuadorans in the costa play a musical style closely related to the coastal Colombian cumbia style, with strong Afro-Caribbean influences. |
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Colombian cumbia and salsa music are popular with young people in urban areas. |
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Originally from Colombia, cumbia has traditionally been a sickly-sweet, anodyne affair for dancing couples. |
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This band mixes all kinds of sounds and genres, including cumbia, hip-hop, salsa, funk, and space-rock. |
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Since the late 1980s, the Colombian dance known as cumbia has grown in popularity. |
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Now he's handed me a pile of CDs of Argentine and Paraguayan cumbia bands. |
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He has spent a lot of time in Buenos Aries where the vibes of cumbia, kuduro, reggaeton and funk started to get him going. |
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This is wild, blenderized Antillean and South American forms: bits of guaracha, guajira, cumbia, mambo and Dominican meringue. |
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The night ended with a dance featuring the traditional dances of salsa, cumbia, and duranguense. |
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They feel inspired by genres from different other parts of the world: from Cuban son to French chanson, from Columbia cumbia to Balkan punk. |
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In Buenos Aires, there's a very creative musical scene right now, with the digital cumbia. |
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A typical cumbia is performed with a male singer backed by a male chorus, drums, electric guitar and bass, and either a brass section or an accordion. |
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Some compared the quebradita dancing style to the Mexican equivalent of dirty dancing, others as a mixture of lambada, cumbia, salsa, flamenco, tango, and the Texas two-step. |
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In addition to their own musical creations, many Mexicans enjoy Latin imports such as cumbia and danzón and various styles of rock and pop music. |
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The channel pursues salsa, merengue, bochata and cumbia as a religion. |
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There's santeria drumming and rock guitar, cumbia and reggaetón, funk and samba, not to mention Nigerian Afrobeat. |
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On the Caribbean coast the bullerengue, lumbalu, and the circular cumbia mingle indigenous and African features. |
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The coastal celebrations feature widespread couple dances of mixed Indian-Spanish origin, and the cumbia includes African qualities. |
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Most tracks feature accordion, several bounce along on a jaunty Colombian cumbia rhythm, and others evoke the reggae and ska of UK two-tone bands. |
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My mother's from Colombia, so I grew up waking up on Saturday mornings with my mom blaring cumbia merengue music, cleaning the house and skipping around. |
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The band used to run from cumbia to dub to hip hop and back again all within the space of a single song, but now the change-ups mostly happen between songs. |
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For us, for example a danzon, a bolero, Cuban son, a bambuco, a cumbia, these are rhythms that are very different, that have their own origins, that have their own histories and their own sonorities. |
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At Triada, a stylish lounge with an orange neon bar and low-slung couches, laughter filled the subtropical air along with the deep-toned drumming of cumbia music. |
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He takes elements of reggae, soul, highlife, cumbia and Ethiopian jazz and gives them enough of an electronic edge to provide the necessary pulse for a club. |
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In between are concerts devoted to all manner of social dance: salsa, charanga, cumbia, boogaloo, cha-cha, forró, tango, foxtrot, Lindy Hop, swing and jitterbug. |
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As the main Afro-salsa group in West Africa, Africando brilliantly relates the love story that links son, bolero, guaracha and cumbia to African rhythms. |
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The accordion is also a traditional instrument in Colombia, commonly associated with the vallenato and cumbia genres. |
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The River Plate forward proved just as adept with a sound system as he is with a ball, filling the waiting room with Argentinian cumbia, a traditional genre of music very popular in South America. |
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This energetic drummer charmed the audience with his humour and intensity through alternating between rhythms of salsa, rumba, cumbia, swing, timba, bolero, and bembe. |
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He moved to Lima while still a child and at the age of 10 began performing with Euforia, a well-known Peruvian cumbia group, with whom he cut his first musical teeth. |
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Guests will have the opportunity to learn the steps to famous Latin dances such as amba, merengue, salsa, bachata, lambada, cumbia, cha cha and rueda. |
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The 2010 edition of the festival included performers such as Tangokineses from Argentina, Cumbia Cienaguera from Colombia. |
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Cumbia dancing has grown popular with the introduction of Nicaraguan artists, including Gustavo Leyton, on Ometepe Island and in Managua. |
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Bachata, Merengue, Salsa and Cumbia have gained prominence in cultural centres such as Managua, Leon and Granada. |
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