Chamamé
Chamamé (Guarani tis: paati, pʋ dɔl suorɛ) anɛ folk yʋʋma kanɛ yi Northeast Argentina nɛ Argentine Mesopotamia. Yʋʋm tusa ayi nɛ pisi (2020) la ni, Chamamé da paas UNESCO Intangible cultural heritage la’ad la ni Argentina da gaŋi li yʋʋm tusa ayi nɛ piinɛ anii (2018) ni la.[1][2]
Subclass of | folk dance, litoraleña music |
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Country of origin | Argentina |
Intangible cultural heritage status | Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity |
Described at URL | https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/01600, https://ich.unesco.org/fr/RL/01600, https://ich.unesco.org/es/RL/01600 |
Chamamé lɛn anɛ buudi malima yʋʋma ka ba nwɛ’ɛdi li South America titɔdig baba, nwɛnɛ Paraguay nɛ Uruguay.[3]
Jesuit reductions dinɛ bɛ sʋ’ʋlimin la kpɛmisid buudi malima nɔbʋgir ka di da an ala keŋ paae sankanɛ ka Spanish Crown da yis Jesuits la 18th century naarin. Zin’ikaŋa ni, Yapeyú, Corrientes da an buudi malima yʋʋma wʋsa tensʋk centre ka nidib bɛdegʋ tiesidi pa’an ye Chamamé yinɛ anina. Ka ban nwɛ’ɛd nɛ bʋnnwɛ’ɛdanam nwɛnɛ Spanish guitar, nɛ googi nɛ accordion nami gɛndigid la, dinɛ kɛ ka ba pʋdi li ye "Chamamé". Ban da maan Chamamé si’em kʋdʋmin la nwɛnɛ 20th century la ni nam bɛ nananna, ka ban yʋ’ʋr la ye 'Chamamé' da pʋm bɛnɛ hali yʋʋm tusir, kɔbiswai nɛ pistan nɛ yinne (1931) la ni; yʋʋm bama buudi, din da nan kae la, ba da buoni linɛ Corrientes Polka.
Chamamé, yinɛ schottische ka Volga German immigrants da mɔri li kena, ka di mɔr Guaraní tiakir, la’asnɛ Spanish guitar nɛ European accordion yi nimbanɛ da mɔri li ken’ zin’igin la na 20th century la saŋa.
Chamamé kaalʋg wʋsa pʋʋgin anɛ Teresa Parodi, Tránsito Cocomarola, Ramona Galarza nɛ Chango Spasiuk.
Gɔsim nɛ’ mɛn
dɛmisim gbɛlimaMusic of Argentina