Chaskinakuy - Music of the Andes FLAC

Tracklist
| 1 | Sumapuni |
| 2 | Kamayu Salasaco |
| 3 | Chiris Aymara |
| 4 | Negra del Alma |
| 5 | Panchita/Amorosa Palomita |
| 6 | Sara |
| 7 | Akuchimay |
| 8 | Juan Careno |
| 9 | Chaska Lucero |
| 10 | Mamá Victoria |
| 11 | Recuerdos de Calahuayo |
| 12 | Lamento/Urpichallay |
Album
Listen free to Chaskinakuy Music of the Andes Sumapuni, Negra del Alma and more. 6 tracks . Лента с персональными рекомендациями и музыкальными новинками, радио, подборки на любой вкус, удобное управление своей коллекцией. Andean music is a group of styles of music from the Andes region in South America. Original chants and melodies come from the general area inhabited by. Album 2001 13 Songs. Music of the Andes Tinku. Music of the Andes Cass, Album. CHA-001. The collection of information about your use of the content, and combination with previously collected information, used to measure, understand, and report on your usage of the service. This does not include personalisation, the collection of information about your use of this service to subsequently personalise content andor advertising for you in other contexts, i. on other service, such as websites or apps, over time. Functional Cookies. In celebration of Putumayo World Musics 20th anniversary, we return to our South American roots with a collection exploring the enchanting music of the Andes. released April 29, 2014. Putumayo World Music was established in 1993 to introduce people to the music of the worlds cultures. Putumayo Kids. Traditional music from Andes Mountains of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and northern Argentina. Band Members. Edmond Badoux Francy Vidal Daniel Zamalloa. Charting new territory for Andean and world music travelers alike, Chaskinakuy performs music from high mountain festivities in Peru, Ecuador, Bolivia and Argentina on an extraordinary collection of regional wind, string, and percussion instruments. Founding date. Songs in album Sisai - Music Of The Andes 1993. Sisai - Despedida. Update Required To play the media you will need to either update your browser to a recent version or update your Flash plugin. TRAVELERS to the Andes during solstice festivals report that a 50-man panpipe band - given enough access to chicha, a local maize beer - can generate a sound that's clear out of this world. The shrill, jubilant mountain music played at festivals in Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Ecuador and Peru is a tradition rooted in the remote South American past, centuries before the Spanish conquistadors reached the western parts of the continent. In fact, some scholars speculate that this musical tradition predates the Incan civilization of the Andes























