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"I'd rather have a locket than a tail..."
Must be Jenna giving you a hint Bruce.
"I'd rather be a bucket than a pail..."
"I'd rather have a locket than a tail..."
Rather than this westernized synthesis material. Which is good too.
Most singers today rejoice if they have 2 octaves to rub together, let alone the 5 octaves she had at her peak.
"I'd rather be a bucket than a pail..."
"I'd rather be a hammer than a snail..."
The intro was authentically OTT. I was expecting Simon and Garfunkel in overdrive!
Here you go, first Los Incas, and now Simon and Garfunkel;)
Seriously though, I enjoy the authenticity they bring to this classic Peruvian song.
The intro was authentically OTT. I was expecting Simon and Garfunkel in overdrive!
AND every other other subway underpass and plaza in the Western(and sometimes Eastern) world.
Please refer to South Park and the peruvian flute band debacle.
Seriously though, I enjoy the authenticity they bring to this classic Peruvian song.
Seriously though, I enjoy the authenticity they bring to this classic Peruvian song.
D'oh! (LOL)
Well played, sir!
D'oh! (LOL)
I kept waiting for Simon & Garfunkel to chime in. I'm glad they didn't.
But the jump to "The Sound of Silence" by S&G was awesome!
for the giggle.
at first it's interesting and refreshing, that don't last
I'll take over for Paul:
"I'd rather be a forest than a street."
WTF is that supposed to mean???????????
"I'd rather be a bucket than a pail..."
is there a cover to this?
The opening notes are sampled by DJ Shadow's "You Can't Go Home Again," which is what perked my ears up...
is there a cover to this?
I'll take over for Paul:
"I'd rather be a forest than a street."
WTF is that supposed to mean???????????
Nice memories!!
https://www.southparkstudios.com/episodes/189010
Does this mean SP was 20 years behind?
hee hee
countyman wrote:
Yeah, seeing as the S & G version is the original.
https://www.southparkstudios.com/episodes/189010
I have always love this song! I can see myself sacrificing and drinking the blood of our vanquished adversaries as the band plays!
MaTías
No kiddin! There's tons of Andean music that puts this to shame. Guess we need to upload some so Bill can give this the burial it deserves.
Pan pipes can be much more than muzak, and can have a musical and political edge. A shame we never usually get to hear the real thing on mainstream radio. This is a better version than the mulched Paul Simon effort, right enough.
Yeah, seeing as the S & G version is the original.
Only original with those lyrics...
In 1913 Alomía Robles composed "El cóndor pasa" and the song was first performed publicly at the Teatro Mazzi in Lima.<2>
In the 1960's the musical group, "Los Incas" performed the song in Paris where it was heard by Paul Simon of Simon and Garfunkel.<2> "Los Incas" told Simon, perhaps through ignorance, that the song was a 19th century musical composition by an anonymous composer.<2> Simon became interested in the song and composed new lyrics for the melody.<2> The song appeared on Simon and Garfunkel's 1970 album Bridge over Troubled Water.
In 1970 Alomía Robles' son, Armando Robles Godoy, filed a copyright lawsuit against Simon and demonstrated that the song had been composed by his father and that his father had copyrighted the song in the United States in 1933.<2> Robles Godoy said that the lawsuit was almost friendly and that he bears no ill will towards Simon for what he considers a misunderstanding.<3> "It was an almost friendly court case, because Paul Simon, besides being a genius, was a great culture-loving guy. It was not carelessness on his part," says Robles Godoy.<3> "He happened to hear the song in Paris from a vernacular group. He liked it, he went to ask them and they gave him the wrong information. They told him it was a popular tune from the 18th Century and not my father's composition. It was a court case without further complications."<3>
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_C%C3%B3ndor_Pasa_(song)
You're probably right, but I still love the Simon & Garfunkel version more.
Yeah, seeing as the S & G version is the original.
.... i don't feel ashamed.....
Baka Beyond - Bwambwa (feat. Ete) ==> Los Incas - El Cóndor Pasa ==> Simon & Garfunkel - The Sound Of Silence ==> Beethoven - Moonlight Sonata ==> Van Morrison - Into The Mystic
— joy and sadness are two lines continue parallel that walk side by side; for times, we forget that the dividing line separates them it is vanished but it is always present for the life
Well played, window. Hook, line and sinker, huh? Some people are just a little too anxious to prove themselves right.
Back on topic, I don't know that I've heard this song in its entirety before. One of the great things about RP is hearing music you don't usually hear every day.
But it does get played enough on RP that I'm pretty damned sick of it and the segue to S&G.
Seeing all the Peruvian pan flute bands that have become popular recently, and the money they can make daily by selling CDs, Stan convinces the other boys to start their own pan flute band. They convince their classmate Craig to invest his $100.00 USD birthday money as venture capital. The plan backfires when the head of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security cracks down on all Peruvian flute bands, rounding them up and imprisoning them
Starship go cwash!
Boy, you people are gullible... I was laying it on pretty thick, but I guess it was a little too irresistible.
And for the record - 3 times wrong, dude.
Well played, window. Hook, line and sinker, huh? Some people are just a little too anxious to prove themselves right.
Back on topic, I don't know that I've heard this song in its entirety before. One of the great things about RP is hearing music you don't usually hear every day.
Oh well, I guess they finally got what was coming to them after Simon dared to plugged in his guitar at the Newport Folk Festival.
I'm guessing Paul Simon was somewhere in a city, in a metro station, near a famous building, where ever.... and heard a bunch of ponchod semi-Peruvian busker like figures cranking this out. Unfortunately, his version didn't stop them playing it for the next 40 years.
SantaFeGrace wrote:
First - both Simon and Garfunkel are alive and well. Second they heard Los Incas play El Condor Pasa in the 60's before writing lyrics & recording the song....
A little research is a good thing:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_C%C3%B3ndor_Pasa_(song)
oscar_driver wrote:
OScar
Boy, you people are gullible... I was laying it on pretty thick, but I guess it was a little too irresistible.
And for the record - 3 times wrong, dude.
First - both Simon and Garfunkel are alive and well. Second they heard Los Incas play El Condor Pasa in the 60's before writing lyrics & recording the song....
A little research is a good thing:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_C%C3%B3ndor_Pasa_(song)
Maybe the composer traveled forward in time to hear the S&G version first and then went back to 1913 to finish up?
Oh well, I guess they finally got what was coming to them after Simon dared to plugged in his guitar at the Newport Folk Festival.
First - both Simon and Garfunkel are alive and well. Second they heard Los Incas play El Condor Pasa in the 60's before writing lyrics & recording the song....
A little research is a good thing:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_C%C3%B3ndor_Pasa_(song)
Koan (in or around Toronto) |
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but i like this version!
It's really the same group, a universal hive-mind of Peruvians.
But......... I was converted by hearing this played on a single flute near Warmiwaynuska. Right time and right place.
Oh well, I guess they finally got what was coming to them after Simon dared to plugged in his guitar at the Newport Folk Festival.
HAHAHAH 2 times wrong dude ... jesus, please educate yourself, don't make yourself a fool like that on a public board LOLO
OScar
You know they're still alive, right?
Oh well, I guess they finally got what was coming to them after Simon dared to plugged in his guitar at the Newport Folk Festival.
Nope, that's 2 of us.
but i like this version!
You're welcome. Yuum bo'otik.
Sorry, Danny, but the ceramic piece on the album cover is not Moche. It is from the Classic period (ca. A. D. 200-900) Oaxacan culture. Moche art is quite distinct, stylistically, from Classic period Oaxacan art. The jade mosaic bat you exhibit is also from Oaxaca, specifically from Monte Albán. Both pieces, the jade bat and the ceramic bat god, are on exhibit in the Oaxacan hall of the Museo Nacional de Antropología in Mexico City. I compared the album cover with a slide I shot in this museum before posting my previous comment, so was certain about what I said. You can see for yourself by going to the official web site of the museum
(click here)
and clicking on Salas > Culturas de Oaxaca > Fotogalería and then clicking through the show until you find the urn depicted on the album cover.
Lo siento, Danny, pero la pieza cerámica en la portada del disco no es moche. Es de la cultura oaxaqueña del periodo Clásico (c 200-900 d.C.). El arte moche es estilísticamente muy diferente del arte del periodo Clásico oaxaqueño. El murciélago de mosaico de jade que pones también es de Oaxaca, concretamente de Monte Albán. Ambas piezas, el murciélago de jade y el dios murciélago de cerámica, se exhiben en la Sala Oaxaca del Museo Nacional de Antropología en la ciudad de México. Comparé la portada del disco con una diapositiva que había tomado en este museo antes de poner mi comentario anterior, por lo que estoy seguro de lo que dije. Puedes averiguarlo en el sitio web oficial del museo
(click here),
haciendo clic en Salas > Culturas de Oaxaca > Fotogalería y recorriendo las imágenes hasta que encuentres la urna que aparece en la portada del disco.
Saludos cordiales,
Otomí
This is why I love RP. Simon and Garfunkel followed by a cover of theirs!!! It all flows so well. I’m gonna miss Bill when he retires 😘😘😘❤️❤️❤️
Who said that he's retiring? 😍