Ana Veydó

Anaveydober Ordóñez Triana (Otanche, Boyacá), better known as Ana Veydó, is a Colombian joropo singer. She is the lead singer of Cimarron.

Ana Veydó
Ana Veydó sings on a Cimarron performance
Background information
Birth nameAnaveydober Ordóñez Triana
Also known asAna Veydó
OriginOtanche, Boyacá
GenresJoropo
Occupation(s)Singer
Years active2000–present
LabelsSmithsonian Folkways Recordings

Solo career

Ana Veydó began her solo career in joropo music festivals in Colombia.[1] She was a pioneer in recio singing, a vocal style traditionally associated with Colombian and Venezuelan plainsmen.

Her first record production was Recio, a musical production with folklore classics such as María Laya, La guayaba, Las ramas del guayabo, El Cimarrón, songs by artists such as Ángel Custodio Loyola and El Carrao de Palmarito.

Other songs by Ana Veydó were El Pajarillo, Seis por derecho, Zumbaquezumba and Corrío.

Her second album, Las dueñas del canto recio, presents the song La mujer llanera, which became well known in the plains of Colombia.

Cimarron

After a few performances in Bogotá and a guest appearance in the Week of the Colombian Colony in Mexico City, in 2000 she was invited to perform with Cimarron band in their concerts.

In 2001, Ana Veydó travels with Cimarron to Washington for performances on behalf of Colombia at the Americartes Festival,[2] an event organized by the Kennedy Center. The following year he took part in the III Meeting for the Promotion and Dissemination of Folklore of the Andean Countries held in Granada, Spain, and at the International Book Fair of Panama. Since then, he is the leading voice of Cimarron.

In 2004, the album Sí soy llanero (Smithsonian Folkways Recordings) takes Cimarron to the Grammy Awards, nominated for the Best Traditional World Music Album.[3] Ana Veydó sings in all the later albums of Cimarron.[4] Welsh harpist Catrin Finch accompanies her voice in 2007 production Catrin Finch and Cimarron Live YN BYW.[5] Since 2011, with the release of the album ¡Cimarrón! Joropo music from the Plains of Colombia, the band tours around Europe, United States, Asia, America and the Middle East.

Ana Veydó is a joropo dancer too. She sang and danced on world music festivals such as Smithsonian Folklife Festival, WOMEX Festival, WOMAD Festival, LEAF Festival, Rainforest World Music Festival, Paléo Festival, Glatt & Verkehrt, Festival Músicas do Mundo, Festival Rio Loco, Festival Mawazine, Rajasthan International Folk Festival, Førde International Folk Music Festival, Sfinks Mixed, Flamenco Biennale Nederland, Lotus World Music & Arts Festival, National Cowboy Poetry Gathering, Utah Arts Festival, San Francisco International Arts Festival, Globalquerque, Festival International de Lousiane, Festival Nuit du Suds, Zomer van Antwerpen, Abu Dhabi Culture & Heritage y Festival México Centro Histórico.

Mataguayabo

In 2007, Ana Veydó released her third solo album, Mataguayabo. The album presents songs such as La cocina de mi mamá, whose lyrics speak of women lifestyle and motherhood across the Colombian-Venezuelan plains.[6]

Mataguayabo is a lovesong with a melodic background. This album also includes songs such as Llorar no es malo, A flor de piel and Lágrimas y recuerdos.[7]

Ana Veydó takes back her old songs as Pajarillo, El Gavilán, Seis por derecho, El día que abandone el Llano, Llano y Recuerdo, Primita hermana and El conejo y el picure, a children's song about the tales of Tío Tigre and Tío Conejo with which grandparents on the plains amused their grandchildren.[8]

Discography

Year Album Record label
2002 Recio Independent
2004 Sí, soy llanero Smithsonian Folkways Recordings
2004 Las dueñas del canto recio Independent
2007 Mataguayabo Independent
2007 Catrin Finch and Cimarron Live YN BYW Astar Artes Recordings
2011 ¡Cimarrón! Joropo music from the Plains of Colombia Smithsonian Folkways Recordings
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References

  1. "Ana Veydó". musica.llanera.com. Retrieved 4 April 2018.
  2. ""El arte es liberarse y disfrutar"". LARED21 (in Spanish). 7 February 2001. Retrieved 11 May 2018.
  3. "El Grupo Cimarron". GRAMMY.com. 14 May 2017. Retrieved 11 May 2018.
  4. "Ana Veydó: Colombian joropo vocalist | Smithsonian Folkways". Smithsonian Folkways Recordings. Retrieved 4 April 2018.
  5. Tiempo, Casa Editorial El. "Música / 'Live YN BYW' con Cimarrón y Catrin Finch". Portafolio.co (in Spanish). Retrieved 11 May 2018.
  6. "Los Llanos (The Plains) of Venezuela. Their music and culture. | Culture and Art |Axisoflogic.com". axisoflogic.com. Retrieved 11 May 2018.
  7. Tiempo, Casa Editorial El. "Mataguayabo, un camino para llegar al Llano". El Tiempo (in Spanish). Retrieved 11 May 2018.
  8. "Ana Veydo, Cantantes| ColArte | Colombia". www.colarte.com. Archived from the original on 29 March 2018. Retrieved 4 April 2018.
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