SynonymsBot
Synonyms for luzmila or Related words with luzmila
urmana
palavecino
alavez
yelitza
eneida
chechu
eufemio
purificacion
javiera
tranquilino
balbino
marieta
idoia
neusa
iraida
laranjeira
joselo
lacambra
rubem
henriqueta
lenine
ermelinda
amparito
yadira
loquillo
waldir
ainara
ornatos
cabreira
lucila
fidela
nerea
narcisa
mucaro
jackeline
unax
cantilo
mirtenbaum
maricela
analisa
denisse
soruco
loynaz
pomares
nativo
txomin
chabuca
cinthia
eladia
gaztambide
Examples of "luzmila"
Bolivian singer
Luzmila
Carpio has made a song in honor of Maria Sabina.
Luzmila
Carpio has been awarded Grand Officer of the Order of Merit of the French Republic (Grande Officier de l'Ordre National du Mérite), on June 14, 2011
Luzmila
Carpio is a Bolivian singer, who has performed in Spanish and Quechua, and former Bolivia's ambassador to France from 2006 to 2010.
On April 21, 2006, President Evo Morales appointed
Luzmila
Carpio as Bolivia's ambassador to France (Mission that lasted four years, until March 31, 2010).
The late 1960s released native groups such as Ruphay, Grupo Aymara, and the emblematic quechua singer,
Luzmila
Carpio. Later Chilean groups such as Inti-Illimani and Los Curacas took the fusion work of Los Jairas and the Parras to invent nueva canción, which returned to Bolivia in the 1980s in the form of canto nuevo artists such as Emma Junaro and Matilde Casazola.
Since the last decade, many gay-pride marches have been organized in all major cities, with the authorization of authorities and police protection, in addition to their participation. In Guayaquil's gay-pride march of 2011, for instance, among those present were the province's vice-prefect
Luzmila
Nicolaide, city council member Gino Molinari, and National Assambleist Gina Godoy, while the police band played traditional songs.
Danyel Waro, La Vieja Trova, Mestre Ambrosio, Genetic Drugs ft Karma Club, Yawar, Cesária Évora, La Vieja Trova, Kayo Fujino, Langa,
Luzmila
Carpio y sus Llaqtamasikuna, Noche Flamenco, Kangaroo Moon, The Bollywood Band, Danyel Waro, Up, Bustle and Out, Chaba Fadela & Cheb Sahraoui, Kanda Bongo Man, Tenores di Bitti, Hukwe Zawose & Wagogo Woman Drummers and Dancers, Banyumas Bamboo, Zehava Ben, Mighty Sparrow, Crocodile Style & Yawar, Iwakichi & Noriko Yamashita, Ekova, Yungchen Lhamo, Te Ava Piti, Ferus Mustafov, Mestre Ambrosio, Jaojoby, Mama Ohandja, Detrimental, Malouma Mint Meideh, Flamenco de Jerez, Yulduz Usmonova and Marzieh
He was born in Concepcion, the son of Luis Urrutia Rozas and of Aurora Manzano Benavente. He completed his studies in his native city, and then attended the Naval Academy, where he became a naval officer. As such, he was sent to supervise the construction of several ships that were being built at the Armstrong shipyards in Newcastle upon Tyne. He eventually returned to Chile on board the recently completed "Esmeralda". He retired from the navy in 1906 while at the same time renouncing his pension. He married
Luzmila
de la Sotta Benavente and together they had seven children.
Born in Colombia, he left at an early age for Caracas, Venezuela, where he studied music and specialized in piano. There is called by Los Melodicos of Renato Capriles to record a vallenato theme of Poncho Zuleta entitled "
Luzmila
" was the first song and the first recording by this artist, in the year 1993 he record production with the group "Los Clasicos" alongside Anibal Caicedo and Jair Castaneda called " Vallenato y más", in the year 1995 Omar Geles discovers his talent in a tour Venezuela and calls to form part of Los Diablitos, there was as keyboard player until 1999, in the years he was in Los Diablitos was producer and arranger of several groups of gender and formed a Vallenato Group known as "Los Emigrantes" with Anibal Caidedo.
Pozadas was born in Potosí, Bolivia. He was a violin student at the "Academia de Bellas Artes" in the Tomás Frías Autonomous University of Potosi, and studies in Buenos Aires at the Conservatorio Municipal Manuel de Falla. Later he studied composition under Gerardo Gandini and won a Scholarship from 1967 to 1968 for postgraduate studies at the CLAEM ("Centro Latinoamericano de Altos Estudios Musicales del Instituto Torcuato Di Tella") with Luigi Nono, Cristobal Halfter, Vladimir Ussachevsky, and Roman Haubenstock-Ramati. He was member of the percussion ensemble Ritmus conducted by Antonio Yepes and The National Philharmonic Orchestra of Buenos Aires. His work for choir "Tres coros bolivianos" won in 1965 the first prize of the contest
Luzmila
Patiño in Cochabamba, Bolivia. Died in a traffic accident in 1968 near Buenos Aires.
Awareness of native music, spirituality and art continued into the 1960s. In 1965, Edgar 'Yayo' Jofré formed a quartet called Los Jairas in La Paz. With Bolivian folk music gaining popularity throughout the country, Jofré, along with Alfredo Dominguez, Ernesto Cavour Julio Godoy, and Gilbert Favre used traditional music in modified forms to appeal to urban-dwellers and Europeans. Later groups like Wara, Khanata, Paja Brava, Savia Andina, and especially Los Kjarkas and Kalamarka helped further refine this fusion. Following a close but different path, groups and singers like
Luzmila
Carpio, Ruphay, and Grupo Aymara started touring abroad and gained international praise for their compositions, tunes that have brought indigenous Bolivian culture and history to the world's attention.