Urubamba (1974) - Instrumental Andean Music, produced by Paul Simon [FLAC]

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Added on February 20, 2015 by MacsMusein Music > Lossless
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Urubamba (1974) - Instrumental Andean Music, produced by Paul Simon [FLAC] (Size: 149.4 MB)
 01 - Urubamba - Urubamba.flac11.49 MB
 02 - El Corazon Del Inca (Heart of the Inca King) - Urubamba.flac18.01 MB
 03 - Canten Cantores (Singers) - Urubamba.flac13.5 MB
 04 - Fugitivo En El Altiplano (Fugitive of the High Plain) - Urubamba.flac9.83 MB
 05 - El Eco - Urubamba.flac15.19 MB
 06 - Caballo De Madera (Wooden Horse) - Urubamba.flac13.17 MB
 07 - Kacharpari - Urubamba.flac13.04 MB
 08 - Campanas De Santa Cruz (Death in Santa Cruz) - Urubamba.flac18.89 MB
 09 - Buena Nueva (Good News Pan Pipes) - Urubamba.flac9.17 MB
 10 - Para Pelusa - Urubamba.flac14.99 MB
 11 - Una - Urubamba.flac12.07 MB
 Urabamba.jpg51.51 KB
 Urubamba.cue1.97 KB

Description

Source: CD
Format: FLAC

This little gem of an album is one of my all-time favorites. I first purchased the LP shortly after it appeared in 1974, and then again when it was re-issued in the '80s (having nearly worn out my original copy). With the advent of CDs, I searched high and low for a digital version, but to no avail. Then the Internet came along, but even with the help of such a powerful tool, all I was able to find were a few new and used vinyl copies. Then one fine day about 10 years ago, after years of disappointment, I discovered that Sony had finally released it in CD form – in Argentina! A few weeks later it arrived in the mail, and now here it is for you to enjoy in FLAC form. Enjoy!


URUBAMBA – ALBUM NOTES from the 1980's re-issue
Urubamba - Produced by Paul Simon

Urubamba is the name of the river which winds at the foot of Machu Picchu, the last stronghold of the Incas against European conquest. So it is altogether fitting this river should have lent its name to a quartet of Peruvian musicians who are devoted to the preservation of the music of Inca culture.

Like a river, Urubamba flows with a natural ease and strength which suggests an indomitable culture. It is among the most soothing and inspiring sounds I know, a source of continual fascination with its alternately stately and martial rhythms, its sometimes festive, sometimes wistful, sometimes absolutely mournful air. Hearing it, for the first time or the hundredth, one feels restored and uplifted.

Urubamba is best known in Europe and North America for its contributions to a pair of Paul Simon recordings. Simon first met the band (then know as Los Incas) when they were co-billed at the Theatre de L'Est Parisienne in Paris in 1965. They gave him one of their albums, and it so intrigued him that he wrote the lyrics to one of their melodies which became Simon and Garfunkel's "El Condor Pasa." Later, they accompanied him on "Duncan" from his first solo album, and on his 1973 concert tour (where "Kacharpari," which opens side two of this album, was recorded). It was during this time that Urubamba was recorded, using the traditional Inca Instruments: la quena, flutes of varying length and pitch; la antara, the panpipe; la charango, the guitar-like stringed instrument; and la bombo leguero, the massive willow and goat-skin drum.

It's ironic that Urubamba should have made a name for itself as a part of contemporary pop music, but it's also testimony to the enduring vitality of this music. After all, the point of Urubamba is that such sounds transcend their era, a point established in the opening track, with its flamenco-like accents and propulsive rhythm, and sustained throughout the record, through the fife-and-drum inflections of "Singers" and the achingly lovely "Death In Santa Cruz" and "Heart Of The Inca King." Listening to it, one feels that he has penetrated to the heart of a lost culture – and to one's own lost heart as well, which perhaps explains the singularly meditative and inspiring feelings it provokes. Like the music of the Appalachian mountains, these Inca melodies are a high, lonesome sound which reach out beyond the time and place of their creation – whether seven or seven hundred years ago – to speak to everyone who hears them today. ~ Dave Marsh


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Urubamba (1974) - Instrumental Andean Music, produced by Paul Simon [FLAC]