Carlos Cuco Rojas
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Carlos Cuco Rojas | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Carlos Rojas Hernández |
Also known as | Carlos "Cuco" Rojas |
Born | San Martín, Meta, Colombia | March 28, 1954
Died | January 10, 2020 Bogotá, Colombia | (aged 65)
Genres | Joropo |
Instrument | Harp |
Years active | 1978–2020 |
Labels | Smithsonian Folkways Recordings |
Carlos Rojas Hernández (San Martín, Meta), better known as Carlos "Cuco" Rojas, (28 March 1954[1] – 10 January 2020)[2][3] was a Colombian harpist and songwriter of joropo. He was the director of Colombian band Cimarron.
Music career
Early life
Carlos Rojas Hernández was born in San Martín, Meta, in the plains of Colombia.
During his high school years, he began his musical training as a self-taught harpist in his hometown, before receiving instruction in the Folkloric Academy of Meta with Alberto Curvelo.
His musical career began at llanera music festivals. In 1975 he recorded his first solo as a harpist with singer-songwriter Manuel Orozco, with whom he had promoted his poem Quebradablanca years before in different stages of Colombia.
In 1978 he recorded a LP with the singer Cholo Valderrama, which includes songs such as Quitaresuellos No. 2, Bonguero del Casanare and Viento Viajero.
In the following years he recorded along with other joropo singers such as Alfonso Niño, Tirso Delgado, Dumar Aljure and Manuel Orozco.
In 1982, his interest in the South American harp took him to Paraguay, where he studied the techniques of the Paraguayan harp with Enrique Samaniego.
Nobel Prize in Literature
The harpist Carlos "Cuco" Rojas was part of the Colombian folkloric musicians that accompanied writer Gabriel García Márquez to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature in Stockholm, Sweden.[4]
In 1984 he acted as a guest at the First International Conference of the Folk Harp in San Diego, United States.
Two years later, Carlos "Cuco" Rojas founded Cimarron band.
Cimarron
With Carlos "Cuco" Rojas as bandleader, Cimarron performed on world music festivals like Smithsonian Folklife Festival, WOMEX Festival, WOMAD, 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, Festival México Centro Histórico and other scenarios around Europe, United States, Asia, America and Middle East.
Cimarron has performed on 30 countries: United States, Spain, Portugal, France, Belgium, Netherlands, Switzerland, Norway, England, Czech Republic, Austria, Slovenia, Croatia, Wales, Morocco, Arab Emirates, India, China, Japan, Malaysia, Rajasthan, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Colombia, Ecuador, Argentina, Chile and Uruguay.
Folklife researching
Carlos Rojas Hérnandez was a folklife researcher too.[5] He has some publications about cultural and musical tradition of the plains of Colombia and Venezuela.
He worked as an advisor to the Music Division of the Ministry of Culture of Colombia.
Discography
Year | Album | Record label |
---|---|---|
2004 | Sí, soy llanero | Smithsonian Folkways Recordings |
2007 | Catrin Finch and Cimarron Live YN BYW | Astar Artes Recordings |
2011 | ¡Cimarrón! Joropo music from the Plains of Colombia | Smithsonian Folkways Recordings |
References
- ^ "CIMARRONEANDO". 31 October 2018.
- ^ Goyeneche, Laura Tamayo. "Murió el arpista Carlos "Cuco" Rojas, director de Cimarrón". www.elcolombiano.com.
- ^ "Cimarrón Musical Director and Harper Carlos "Cuco" Rojas Dies in Bogotá | World Music Central.org".
- ^ Gutiérrez, Norberto. "La música del Nobel García Márquez en antesala del Hay Festival 2018". www.informate.com.mx (in European Spanish). Archived from the original on 10 March 2018. Retrieved 4 April 2018.
- ^ Tiempo, Casa Editorial El. "Historia de cuando el joropo era un pecado". El Tiempo (in Spanish). Retrieved 4 April 2018.