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Tag Archive | "dancing"

Danza de los Viejitos, Michoacán, Mexico

Saturday, August 15, 2009

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The dance signifies the blessing of ancestral forces, the renewal of the earth and the return of fertility. It signifies spring after winter, where the banging of the earth is reminiscent of the sexual act, and the manner in which pre-Columbians planted maize using a stick, one seed at a time.

Papantla

Friday, August 14, 2009

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From Tuxpan I head south through the verdant landscape passing Poza Rica and arriving in Papantla, a small Totonac town that’s famed for its nearby ruins, El Tajín. The town is busy and replete with all the teeming energy you’d expect from a working indigenous settlement. Passersby hold animated discussions on street corners. Market vendors [...]

Kuna dance, Panama

Thursday, August 13, 2009

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Whilst visiting the Kuna Yala archipelago in Panama, my travelling companions and I were treated to a traditional dance performance. The Kuna are one of Latin Americas most successful indigenous groups and retain many elements of their Pre-Columbian traditions. This clip was shot in the village of Nalunega, close to El Porvenir.

Dance practice in Oaxaca City, Mexico

Thursday, August 13, 2009

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I was walking through Oaxaca City one evening when I stumbled upon a group of dancers practicing their routine. Dance is an ancient and revered art in Mexico. Rooted in the ancient Pre-Columbian past, many dances have complex symbolic moves and meanings; others are performed solely for fun.

Dancing on the Isthmus, Juchitán, Mexico, PART 1

Thursday, August 13, 2009

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Wherever you go in Mexico, youre never far from a fiesta. I stumbled upon this one whilst updating material for Footprints Mexico and Central America Handbook. The setting is Juchitán, a small town located on the Isthmus of Tehuantepec in Oaxaca state.

Dancing on the Isthmus, Juchitan, Mexico, PART 2

Thursday, August 13, 2009

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The Isthmus of Tehuantepec is deeply imbued with indigenous culture and traditions. The Zapotecs, particularly, are a strong regional force. This dance has powerful indigenous overtones and has probably not changed much for hundreds of years.

Located in Nicaragua’s most remote and disconnected province – the North Atlantic Autonomous Region – the diminutive settlement of Waspam is the centre of the Miskito universe. This short video clip, featuring music from Miskito musician Li Lamni, was shot on take-off from town’s modest airstrip.

Mr Edgar ‘Rasta’ Coulsen is a native of the Caribbean town of San of Juan del Norte – an end of the world settlement perched at the mouth of the Rio San Juan. In this short video interview, Interamericana talked to him about the changes that have taken place in the region since his childhood.

One day, me and my compadres took a trip up the Río Istiam – a tranquil waterway that meanders inland at the isthmus between Ometepe’s two volcanoes, Concepción and Maderas. The river is home to abundant bird life, caimans, turtles and herds of indolent livestock. Many thanks to Jennifer Kennedy and the three Matts – Barwick, Hicks and Ashford, who appear in this video clip.

Via Via is something of a León institution, attracting Nicas and foreigners alike with its buzzing multi-cultural atmosphere, dirt-cheap bottles of rum and rousing Friday night music sets. Amalgama, featured in this video, are an institution in themselves, playing everything from rock ballads to crowd-pleasing revolutionary classics. In this clip they are accompanied by itinerant musician Richard Crandell and his Zimbabwean imbira.

As a poor chele, or white boy, rhythm was never going to come naturally to me. Nonetheless, my militant salsa instructor, Angel, patiently tried to teach me to dance. And when he could be patient no longer, he simply ordered me to the nearest disco…

Granada’s international poetry festival kicked off yesterday, 14th February 2010, with a belting set from Katia Cardenal. Performing at the Plaza Independencia, Katia sang a mixture of rousing folk songs and revolutionary ballads, including a superb homage to the Miskito people of the Atlantic coast (2nd song featured, actually in the Miskito language). Turn up the volume, pour yourself a rum, kick back and enjoy…