Tag Archives | Uruguay

The Candombe of Ruben Rada

We start our dive into Uruguay with one of the country’s favorite musicians — candombe icon Rubén Rada.

Candombe is Afro-Uruguayan music that originated with African slaves who arrived in Uruguay starting in the mid 1700s. “Candombe” was the generic name for their dances; the Africans called their drums, and the place they gathered to perform their music, “tangó.” In the early 1800s the Uruguayan government tried to ban the genre, fearing the cultural expression would lead to insurrection. By the mid 1800s when Uruguay abolished slavery, African dancing had become an inextricable part of Uruguayan culture — candombe was here to stay! The genre adapted over time to include many types of both traditional and popular music. In the late 20th century, as you’ll see in this video  — and good for us! — Uruguayan musicians like Rubén Rada had taken candmobe to the world.

When you think tango, think URUGUAY

When you’re visiting Uruguay, don’t you dare talk about tango as the exclusive music of Argentina — Uruguayan tango is the real deal.

Uruguay can tango too! In fact, if you’re from Uruguay, you may protest when anyone associates tango with Argentina and doesn’t mention that the genre began almost simultaneously in Buenos Aires, Argentina, and Montevideo, Uruguay. In this video we see a performance of “La Cumparsita” composed in Montevideo in in 1919. Yes!

Uruguayan Murga is singing, dancing, silliness and survival

Let’s meet the magic of Uruguayan murga….

Uruguayan Murga is theater, comedy and celebration of Uruguay’s survival all at once — sing-song poetry in the voice of a dozen costumed men. Have you ever seen a cultural performance as charmingly engaging as the one in this video? It’s theater, comedy and celebration of  survival of Uruguay all at once — sing-song poetry in the voice of a dozen costumed men.