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Celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month


Latin America, including Latino communities in the United States, is one of the most diverse, dynamic musical regions of the world, marked both by longstanding traditions and by unceasing creativity. Music is central to Latino cultural life, and the richness of Latinos' musical activity in North America reflects both their large population and their complex cultural makeup.


Click for Track Details Madame Calalú Puerto Rican plena performed by Los Pleneros de la 21 Play Sample

Click for Track Details María Laya Colombian joropo performed by Grupo Cimarrón featuring Ana Veydó Play Sample

Click for Track Details Yo canto en el llano Cuban son performed by Cuarteto Patria y Compay Segundo Play Sample


Over forty million people of Hispanic descent make the United States their home. One out of eight Americans uses labels like hispano, Latino, tejano, Chicano, mexicano, Nuyorican, Cuban, nuevomexicano, salvadoreño, or colombiano to point to his or her heritage. Front-page news proclaims Latinos the largest minority group and the fastest-growing segment of the population, having more than doubled since 1980 and accounted for half the total population growth since 2001. In the past decade, the highest rates of Latino growth have been not in California, Texas, New York, Miami, Chicago, and other long-time Latino strongholds, but in states such as Arkansas, Indiana, Michigan, North Carolina, Virginia, and Wisconsin. Hand in hand with the burgeoning Latino population has come an equal infusion of Latino music, usually called música latina in the windows and bins of record stores.


Click for Track Details Noche de amores South Texan conjunto performed by Valerio Longoria y su Conjunto Play Sample

Click for Track Details Corrido de Nogales Corrido from Arizona-Sonora borderland performed by Robert Lee Benton, Jr. and Oscar Gonzalez Play Sample


Latino music speaks to the heart of personal and social identity, issues of survival for immigrant communities who are adjusting to alien social environments and building a new spirit of unity. Music embodies knowledge, meaning, and spirit, essential assets to envisioning and living a life in which Latinos can feel genuinely themselves. Musicians and communities continually construct new meanings for their music, which serves both social and aesthetic needs.


Click for Track Details Brincando na Roda Brazilian capoeira performed by Grupo de Capoeira Angola Pelourinho Play Sample

Click for Track Details El Cascabel Mexican son jarocho performed by José Gutierrez and los Hermanos Ochoa Play Sample

Click for Track Details Huayno from Ayacucho Peruvian huayno performed with Peruvian charango and guitar Play Sample


From lively mariachi to poetic jíbaro music to the rhythmic bomba and plena, the music here represents both local longstanding Latin American traditions and modern twists on them by immigrant communities in the United States. The music is a way in to understanding the diversity, heritage, and hopes of Latinos in the United States and abroad.


Click for Track Details México lindo Mexican mariachi performed by Nati Cano's Mariachi Los Camperos Play Sample

Click for Track Details Los gallos cantaron Puerto Rican aginaldo jíbaro performed by Ecos de Borinquen Play Sample

Click for Track Details Mayelá Puerto Rican bomba performed by Viento de Agua Play Sample


Browse thousands more tracks from Latin America on Smithsonian Global Sound to further explore the rich dynamic sounds of Latino culture.



FEATURED VIDEOS





Mariachi los Camperos performing at the 2004 Folklife Festival in Washington, DC.

Source: 512k Quicktime Video, 3m 20s.









Wilton Ernesto Gamez Balcárcel and Ana Veydó Ordóñez of Grupo Cimarrõn. "Music is My Life"

Source: 512k Quicktime Video, 1m 01s.







FEATURED RADIO PROGRAM



Radio Latino
Produced in collaboration with the Smithsonian Latino Center.







FEATURED ARTIST




José Gutiérrez and Los Hermanos Ochoa
Born and raised on the Costa de la Palma (Palm Coast) ranch near the...


SI Folklife Contact Copyright Privacy Credits

Full Text Only Catalog

Smithsonian Global Sound

www.smithsonianglobalsound.org

"The ethnographic answer to iTunes" -- New York Times

Smithsonian Global Sound is an unparalleled experience of world music. Download music and sound from acclaimed international archives such as Smithsonian Folkways Recordings, the International Library of African Music, the Archives & Research Centre for Ethnomusicology in India, and Central Asian recordings from the Aga Khan Trust for Culture.

Many tracks at www.smithsonianglobalsound.org are rare, newly preserved recordings that are now extensively cataloged and easily accessible around the world. Royalties support artists and archives, honoring and establishing intellectual property rights. By distributing these exciting sounds, Smithsonian Global Sound increases interest in traditional world music and promotes the appreciation of cultural diversity around the world.

Smithsonian Global Sound increases interest in traditional world music and promotes the appreciation of cultural diversity around the world. Royalties support artists and archives, honoring and establishing intellectual property rights. Many tracks are rare, newly preserved recordings that are now extensively cataloged and easily accessible. By distributing these exciting sounds around the world, Smithsonian Global Sound aims to inspire future generations of musicians to continue to promote their cultural heritage.

The Smithsonian Global Sound Experience

Browse, sample, and download thousands of beautiful and culturally significant tracks of music and sound. Don't know where to start? Listen to Radio Global Sound, watch video on Global Sound Live, read fascinating and in depth Artist Profiles, or discover exciting new music through our Musical Journeys from world music celebrities.

Downloads are available in versatile MP3 format or CD quality FLAC files. Our open files allow access through any computer or any portable media player. Smithsonian Global Sound is unique in that it offers a rich store of free material to accompany the audio, including original Folkways liner notes and new contextual information created by archival collaborators.

"Smithsonian Global Sound - the most exciting online music happening in quite some time." -- Salon.com

Enhancing Education via music in the Classroom

Smithsonian Global Sound is an invaluable tool for ethnomusicology, social sciences, and language arts educators. This virtual music library of the future gives teachers, students, and scholars instant access to original recordings and extensive documentation from diverse cultures all over globe. Many libraries from Harvard University to the University of Wisconsin to the Denver Public Library have already enhanced their collections with a subscription from Smithsonian Global Sound.

"The Smithsonian Global Sound site is a fabulous resource of authentic music, and I am looking forward to sharing it with my students." – DeKalb, Illinois
Middle school teacher

Supporting Musicians and Archives of Traditional Music

Royalties earned from the sale of music on the site go to the artists, their communities, the archives that preserve their recordings, and further development of Smithsonian Global Sound. These groundbreaking practices give musicians and artists a chance to maintain their cultures and profit from their work while forging new bonds between local sound archives and the communities whose music they preserve.

If you are an archive or collection interested in joining with Smithsonian Global Sound, please contact smithsonianglobalsound@si.edu.

"When we saw the blossoming of the Internet, we thought, what if we could use this as a device for opening up the archives? People who are not usually heard can project their voices around the planet." - Richard Kurin, Director of the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage