Xiomara Fortuna Explained

Xiomara Fortuna
Birth Place:Monte Cristi Province
Origin:Dominican Republic
Years Active:1985–present

Xiomara Fortuna (born 1959, Monte Cristi, Dominican Republic) is a Dominican singer and composer. She is known for her deep voice and her work in the genres of world music, música raíz (a Dominican style combining rock, jazz and afro-Dominican rhythms), jazz and contemporary music.

Biography

Xiomara Fortuna was born in the province of Monte Cristi, in the northwest region of the Dominican Republic, at the border with Haiti[1]

Her mother introduced her to music. Her first exposure to music was Dominican folk music, including vocal and dance. As a youth, she was interested in Trova and social justice-themed music. She wrote her first songs as a teenager.

After high school, she enrolled in the Universidad Autónoma de Santo Domingo (UASD). She began performing live in Santo Domingo. She performed in Kaliumbe, where she honed her musical style inspired by traditional Caribbean music, specifically the music of the Dominican Republic and Haiti. She lives in Santo Domingo and at Rancho Ecológico El Campeche she founded[2] In 2010, a group from Gettysburg College visited her ranch.[3]

She has performed in Switzerland, Cuba, Russian and France. She has collaborated with Archie Shepp and performed with Miriam Makeba and Toure Kunda.

Discography

In Popular Culture

Xiomara Fortuna is mentioned in Elizabeth Acevedo's young adult novel Clap When You Land: "Tía puts her bag away, turns on the kitchen radio / Xiomara Fortuna's voice bellows out, & soon / we are both singing along" (p. 313)

References

  1. Web site: XIOMARA FORTUNA. DR Jazz Festival. 2016-06-18.
  2. Web site: CIMARRÓN SPIRIT La Caña...An Interview with Xiomara Fortuna - CIMARRÓN SPIRIT . 2014-12-05 . 2016-06-23 . unfit . https://web.archive.org/web/20141205140855/http://www.loscimarrones.com/2014/06/08/interview-with-xiomara-fortuna/ . December 5, 2014 .
  3. Web site: Gettysburg College - Music, Ritual, and the Struggle for Haitian and Afro-Dominican Rights in the Dominican Republic. www.gettysburg.edu. 2016-06-23.

Sources

External links