Los Koyas

Los Koyas is a folk music group composed of five soloists who perform musical pieces and songs of twelve Latin American countries, from the Andes to Cuba.

Created in 1970 by Domingo Fontana, the group started its career with a tour of 128 concerts in France during the winter of 1970-1971. Its main recordings, distributed worldwide by the Barclay Records label, contributed to the spread of Latin American traditional music in many countries.

If titles such as El condor pasa and Virgenes del sol are among the tunes that allowed the group to stand out a few months after its creation, a varied repertoire is the trademark of Los Koyas when performing on stage, using many popular instruments such as:
- the Andean flutes (quena, quenacho, siku)
- the harp (from Paraguay, Venezuela, Colombia and Mexico)
- the charango (the 10-string instrument sometimes made with an armadillo shell) and the ronroco
- the cuatro, a small 4-string guitar from Colombia and Venezuela
- the guitar
- the violin
- rhythm instruments such as the bombo, the guiro, the maracas, the bongos...

In 2009, Los Koyas released an album to which Jaime Torres, the charango soloist from Argentina, brings his personal touch.

Discography

Hereunder is the main recordings of Los Koyas that were issued between 1970 and 2009.

Official LP albums of Los Koyas

Official single recordings of Los Koyas

External links

References and other sources

- Movieplay (Spain)
- King records (Japan)
- Metronome (Germany)
- Ricordi (Italy)
- Codiscos (Colombia)
- Musart (Mexico)
- Sonido (Nicaragua)
- Festival (Australia)
- Festival (New Zealand)

    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, May 26, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.