Rumillajta Explained

Rumillajta
Background:group_or_band
Origin:La Paz, Bolivia
Years Active:1980–present
Current Members:Juan Jorge Laura (founder)
Leonardo Laura
Cesar Ulloa
Eddy Limachi
Joan Ismael
Past Members:Víctor Ferrel
Edwin Rowert
Édgar Villarroel
Adrián Villanueva †
Néstor Tintaya
Juan Carlos Cordero
Édgar Montes de Oca
Miguel A. Puña
Max Carlos Ponce
Miguel A. Villanueva
Alejandro Alarcón
Cristian Espinoza
Rene Matias
Mauricio Flores
Efrain Loza

Rumillajta (Quechua: rumi stone, llaqta place (village, city),[1] pronounced) is a Bolivian musical group that formed in 1980, by Juan Jorge Laura Quisbert, and became one of the most important progenitors of Andean music. They were the subjects of a short documentary from the BBC and played at festivals on three continents (Asia, Europe and America). Their music concerns folk themes and nature as well as more political themes like foreign exploitation and indigenous rights. The virtuosity, the unique style and innovation with which it presents the music of the high mountains and its warm valleys, have given the group its international prestige as one of the first in the genre of traditional music and as one of the finest and most serious exponents of Andean music.

Discography

Albums

External links

Notes and References

  1. Teofilo Laime Ajacopa, Diccionario Bilingüe Iskay simipi yuyayk'ancha, La Paz, 2007 (Quechua-Spanish dictionary)