comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - Los teen tops - Page 1 : comparemela.com

Filled With Sound: Reviews of releases of Harry Dean Stanton, Lyle Workman, Steve Strongman and more

Filled With Sound: Reviews of releases of Harry Dean Stanton, Lyle Workman, Steve Strongman and more
goldminemag.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from goldminemag.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Netflix s six-part rock en español docuseries sparks fierce debates, offers valuable history lessons

Posted By Enrique Lopetegui on Thu, Jan 14, 2021 at 10:00 AM click to enlarge Break It All to make rockeros worldwide mad as hell. “Why isn’t [enter your favorite band] mentioned?” some asked. “Why is [enter a band you don’t like] in bigger letters than [enter band you like]?” And the trailer for the six-part series, which began streaming late last month, didn’t help much either. “Where is Caifanes?” Mexican fans inquired. “What are Mon Laferte and Maná doing there?” complained those who don’t consider the Chilean songstress and the immensely successful Mexican band to be “rock.” “Where are Los Shakers?” asked Uruguayan fans, offended by the fact that the band’s greatest hit was named “Rompan Todo” (“Break It All”), clearly the inspiration for the documentary series’ title.

Break It All: A Revival of Latin American Rock

Netflix six-part documentary series Break It All ( Rompan Todo) has revived all the music that was, as a Colombian born in the 80s, the soundtrack of my adolescence. With footage of a time when the now infamous MTV showed music videos, I’m thrown back to the day in 1995 when I first saw Café Tacvba’s MTV Unplugged. I rushed the next day to buy Re, an album hailed as “the equivalent of The Beatles’ White Album for the rock en español movement” by The New York Times. Break it All explores the birth and evolution of rock in Latin America from the hit “La Bamba” by Mexican American Ritchie Valens in 1959 all the way to the noughties. In each episode a diverse range of musicians are featured as interviewees or through archive footage to share anecdotes that construct the narrative of this series.

Rompan Todo Explores A Turbulent History Of Latin America Through Rock Music

Rompan Todo Explores A Turbulent History Of Latin America Through Rock Music By Betto Arcos | NPR Update RequiredTo play audio, update browser or Flash plugin. Sergio Arau (center) poses with fellow Botellita de Jerez bandmates. They were one of the most influential groups in the 80s after rock re-emerged in Mexico following 15 years of censorship and repression. Lourdes Grobet In the 1960s, as rock and roll became America s most popular music, the genre also began to take hold in countries like Argentina, Mexico and Chile. Netflix s new six-part documentary series, Break It All: The History of Rock in Latin America, explores the music from the 60s to the present.

New Netflix Docuseries Rompan Todo Explores Latin America s Rock History : NPR

Embed iframe src https://www.npr.org/player/embed/949584350/950314987 width 100% height 290 frameborder 0 scrolling no title NPR embedded audio player ARI SHAPIRO, HOST: In the 1960s, as rock and roll became this country s most popular music, it also took hold in countries like Argentina, Mexico and Chile. A new documentary series called Break Everything: The History Of Rock In Latin America is now on Netflix. Betto Arcos reports. BETTO ARCOS, BYLINE: Break Everything - Rompan Todo in Spanish - begins in the early 1960s in Mexico, when bands like Los Teen Tops started covering American hits. (SOUNDBITE OF SONG, POPOTITOS REMASTERIZADO )

© 2024 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.