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Yma Sumac - Gopher Mambo (Capitol Records 1954)
Mambo! is the fifth studio album by Peruvian soprano Yma Sumac. It was released on 1954 by Capitol Records. It was entirely composed by Moisés Vivanco.
Yma Sumac (September 13, 1922 - November 1, 2008) was a noted Peruvian singer. In the 1950s, she was one of the most famous proponents of exotica music. She became an international success based on her extreme vocal range, which was said to be "well over four octaves" and was sometimes claimed to span even five octaves at her peak.
Stories published in the 1950s claimed that she was an Incan princess, directly descended from Atahualpa. Her New York Times obituary reported that "the largest and most persistent fabrication about Ms. Sumac was that she was actually a housewife from Brooklyn named Amy Camus, her name spelled backward. The fac...
published: 05 Jan 2013
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Yma Sumac In Her Duet With A Flute - Insane Harmonization
Pretty insane, no?
Every single note here was so perfectly executed that you need to watch in slow to notice the greatness of this harmony.
Left: The main note played in the flute.
Right: Yma's notes.
Live in Moscow, Russia (1960)
published: 14 Aug 2017
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Yma Súmac - Chuncho (1958) (HD) (Audio Remasterizado)
El 17 de julio de 1958 se estrenó la película mexicana "Música de siempre", dirigida por el chileno Tito Davison y escrita por el mexicano Alfonso Patiño Gómez, protagonizada por estrellas internacionales como Édith Piaf, Amália Rodrigues, Libertad Lamarque, Yma Súmac y demás. El largometraje es una secuencia de actos musicales interpretados por artistas de Latinoamérica y Europa.
Es la cuarta película de la carrera de la princesa inca, interpretó "Chuncho", lanzado en su tercer álbum "Inca Taqui" de 1953, donde logró desarrollar la "doble voz" o "triple coloratura", la misma que se asemeja al trinar de las aves. La cantante peruana consideró este tema como el más "completo" de su discografía. Su primera versión se llamó "Birds" en 1951 y formó parte de la banda sonora de la obra de Broad...
published: 16 Sep 2023
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Yma Sumac on David Letterman Show (1987)
1987 Yma Sumac performance and interview with David Letterman.
published: 10 Nov 2008
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Yma Sumac - Vírgenes del Sol 1944
Esta canción carece en sí de una letra por lo que más es el instrumental, lleva el sello de la Discografía Odeon de 1944. Lo realiza a lado de Moisés Vivanco quien fue su esposo.
Ésta es una canción de Jazz Incaico
published: 01 Mar 2012
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El cóndor pasa (Huayno) - Yma Sumac
Song taken from the album "La voz" (the voice) by Yma Sumac. Yma was an outstanding singer (5/8 chords) who was born in Perú though known worldwide for her unique talent.
Subscribe if you like this kind of music.
No copyright infringement intended, I do not own this video copyrights nor the music used in it. This was uploaded for the sole reason of sharing this great artist to the world.
http://yma-sumac.com/yma_Sumac_store.html
published: 21 Oct 2012
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TUMPA - Yma Sumac | Original - HD
TUMPA - Yma Sumac | Original - HD
Únete a nuestros siguientes grupos para mas información sobre la princesa Inca:
SUSCRIBETE A MI CANAL, de respaldo @RicardoQuispeTV
¡El pueblo unido jamás sera vencido!
published: 08 Mar 2023
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Yma Sumac, The Peruvian Songbird, sings "Chuncho."
In a piece of classic exotica, the unique Yma Sumac (1922-2008) displays her most unusual voice. I, like many, have mixed feelings about Sumac (whose name, in Quechua, means 'How beautiful!") Some feel there was a potentially great operatic voice here,had it been trained as such. However, the decision was made to frame her performance as essentially a presentation of exotica. To a certain extent, Ivan Rebroff made the same decision.
One cannot gainsay the past, but there is ample evidence of an extraordinary voice here, that much is certain.
published: 06 May 2010
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Yma Sumac sings Queen of the Night and Clair de Lune
Purchase here: https://www.yma-sumac.com/music
The extraordinary Yma Sumac sings Mozart's Queen of the Night aria in her own style and then a never before sung rendition of Debussy's Clair de Lune. Both are live recordings from her own archives, donated to her official website. Both tracks in their entirety are available for download (or on the CD 'The Voice') at www.yma-sumac.com .
All images and music ©Damon Devine/Official Yma Sumac Archives of www.yma-sumac.com
published: 17 Nov 2018
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Yma Sumac sings Taita Inty "Hymn of the Sun Virgin" 1950. The Colgate Comedy Hour.
Eddie Cantor introduces Yma Sumac who sings an Inca hymn, a thousand years old, entitled "Hymn to the Sun Virgin". Air date September 9, 1950, a live performance on the first Colgate Comedy Hour. She became an international success based on her extreme vocal range. Yma Sumac sold more than 40 million records which makes her one of the best-selling Latin Americans in history and the best-selling Peruvian in history. She was one of the most famous exponents of exotica music during the 1950s. Mastered from 16mm kinescope film.
published: 03 Apr 2022
2:21
Yma Sumac - Gopher Mambo (Capitol Records 1954)
Mambo! is the fifth studio album by Peruvian soprano Yma Sumac. It was released on 1954 by Capitol Records. It was entirely composed by Moisés Vivanco.
Yma Sum...
Mambo! is the fifth studio album by Peruvian soprano Yma Sumac. It was released on 1954 by Capitol Records. It was entirely composed by Moisés Vivanco.
Yma Sumac (September 13, 1922 - November 1, 2008) was a noted Peruvian singer. In the 1950s, she was one of the most famous proponents of exotica music. She became an international success based on her extreme vocal range, which was said to be "well over four octaves" and was sometimes claimed to span even five octaves at her peak.
Stories published in the 1950s claimed that she was an Incan princess, directly descended from Atahualpa. Her New York Times obituary reported that "the largest and most persistent fabrication about Ms. Sumac was that she was actually a housewife from Brooklyn named Amy Camus, her name spelled backward. The fact is that the government of Peru in 1946 formally supported her claim to be descended from Atahualpa, the last Incan emperor".
Chávarri adopted the stage name of Imma Sumack (also spelled Ymma Sumack and Ima Sumack) before she left South America to go to the United States. The stage name was based on her mother's name, which was derived from Ima Shumaq, Quechua for "how beautiful!" although in interviews she claimed it meant "beautiful flower" or "beautiful girl".
Yma Sumac first appeared on radio in 1942. Sumac and orchestra and bandleader Moisés Vianco were married that year. She recorded at least 18 tracks of Peruvian folk songs in Argentina in 1943. These early recordings for the Odeon label featured Moisés Vivanco's group, Compañía Peruana de Arte, a group of 46 Indian dancers, singers, and musicians.
In 1946 Sumack and Vivanco moved to New York City, where they performed as the Inka Taky Trio, Sumack singing soprano, Vivanco on guitar, and her cousin Cholita Rivero singing contralto and dancing. She was signed by Capitol Records in 1950, at which time her stage name became Yma Sumac.
During the 1950s, Yma Sumac produced a series of lounge music recordings featuring Hollywood-style versions of Incan and South American folk songs, working with the likes of Les Baxter and Billy May. The combination of her extraordinary voice, exotic looks, and stage personality made her a hit with American audiences. Sumac appeared in a Broadway musical, Flahooley, in 1951, as a foreign princess who brings Aladdin's lamp to an American toy factory to have it repaired. The show's score was by Sammy Fain and E. Y. "Yip" Harburg, but Sumac's three numbers were the work of Vivanco with one co-written by Vivanco and Fain. Capitol Records, Sumac's label, recorded the show. Flahooley closed quickly, but the recording continues as a cult classic, in part because it also marked the Broadway debut of Barbara Cook. During the height of Sumac's popularity, she appeared in the films Secret of the Incas (1954) and Omar Khayyam (1957). She became a U.S. citizen on July 22, 1955. In 1959 she performed Jorge Bravo de Rueda's classic song "Vírgenes del Sol" on her album Fuego del Ande.
In 1992 Guenter Czernetzky directed a documentary for German television entitled Yma Sumac -- Hollywoods Inkaprinzessin (Yma Sumac -- Hollywood's Inca Princess).
With the resurgence of lounge music in the late 1990s, Sumac's profile rose again when the song "Ataypura" was featured in the Coen Brothers film, The Big Lebowski. Her song "Bo Mambo" appeared in a commercial for Kahlúa liquor and was sampled for the song "Hands Up" by The Black Eyed Peas. The song "Gopher Mambo" was used in the films Ordinary Decent Criminal, Dead Husbands, Spy Games, and Confessions of a Dangerous Mind. "Gopher Mambo" was also used in an act of the Cirque Du Soleil show Quidam. The songs "Goomba Boomba" and "Malambo No. 1" appeared in Death to Smoochy. Yma Sumac is also mentioned in the lyrics of the 1980s song Joe le taxi by Vanessa Paradis.
Yma Sumac died on November 1, 2008, aged 86 at an assisted-living home in Los Angeles, nine months after being diagnosed with colon cancer. She was interred at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Hollywood in the "Sanctuary of Memories" section.
https://wn.com/Yma_Sumac_Gopher_Mambo_(Capitol_Records_1954)
Mambo! is the fifth studio album by Peruvian soprano Yma Sumac. It was released on 1954 by Capitol Records. It was entirely composed by Moisés Vivanco.
Yma Sumac (September 13, 1922 - November 1, 2008) was a noted Peruvian singer. In the 1950s, she was one of the most famous proponents of exotica music. She became an international success based on her extreme vocal range, which was said to be "well over four octaves" and was sometimes claimed to span even five octaves at her peak.
Stories published in the 1950s claimed that she was an Incan princess, directly descended from Atahualpa. Her New York Times obituary reported that "the largest and most persistent fabrication about Ms. Sumac was that she was actually a housewife from Brooklyn named Amy Camus, her name spelled backward. The fact is that the government of Peru in 1946 formally supported her claim to be descended from Atahualpa, the last Incan emperor".
Chávarri adopted the stage name of Imma Sumack (also spelled Ymma Sumack and Ima Sumack) before she left South America to go to the United States. The stage name was based on her mother's name, which was derived from Ima Shumaq, Quechua for "how beautiful!" although in interviews she claimed it meant "beautiful flower" or "beautiful girl".
Yma Sumac first appeared on radio in 1942. Sumac and orchestra and bandleader Moisés Vianco were married that year. She recorded at least 18 tracks of Peruvian folk songs in Argentina in 1943. These early recordings for the Odeon label featured Moisés Vivanco's group, Compañía Peruana de Arte, a group of 46 Indian dancers, singers, and musicians.
In 1946 Sumack and Vivanco moved to New York City, where they performed as the Inka Taky Trio, Sumack singing soprano, Vivanco on guitar, and her cousin Cholita Rivero singing contralto and dancing. She was signed by Capitol Records in 1950, at which time her stage name became Yma Sumac.
During the 1950s, Yma Sumac produced a series of lounge music recordings featuring Hollywood-style versions of Incan and South American folk songs, working with the likes of Les Baxter and Billy May. The combination of her extraordinary voice, exotic looks, and stage personality made her a hit with American audiences. Sumac appeared in a Broadway musical, Flahooley, in 1951, as a foreign princess who brings Aladdin's lamp to an American toy factory to have it repaired. The show's score was by Sammy Fain and E. Y. "Yip" Harburg, but Sumac's three numbers were the work of Vivanco with one co-written by Vivanco and Fain. Capitol Records, Sumac's label, recorded the show. Flahooley closed quickly, but the recording continues as a cult classic, in part because it also marked the Broadway debut of Barbara Cook. During the height of Sumac's popularity, she appeared in the films Secret of the Incas (1954) and Omar Khayyam (1957). She became a U.S. citizen on July 22, 1955. In 1959 she performed Jorge Bravo de Rueda's classic song "Vírgenes del Sol" on her album Fuego del Ande.
In 1992 Guenter Czernetzky directed a documentary for German television entitled Yma Sumac -- Hollywoods Inkaprinzessin (Yma Sumac -- Hollywood's Inca Princess).
With the resurgence of lounge music in the late 1990s, Sumac's profile rose again when the song "Ataypura" was featured in the Coen Brothers film, The Big Lebowski. Her song "Bo Mambo" appeared in a commercial for Kahlúa liquor and was sampled for the song "Hands Up" by The Black Eyed Peas. The song "Gopher Mambo" was used in the films Ordinary Decent Criminal, Dead Husbands, Spy Games, and Confessions of a Dangerous Mind. "Gopher Mambo" was also used in an act of the Cirque Du Soleil show Quidam. The songs "Goomba Boomba" and "Malambo No. 1" appeared in Death to Smoochy. Yma Sumac is also mentioned in the lyrics of the 1980s song Joe le taxi by Vanessa Paradis.
Yma Sumac died on November 1, 2008, aged 86 at an assisted-living home in Los Angeles, nine months after being diagnosed with colon cancer. She was interred at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Hollywood in the "Sanctuary of Memories" section.
- published: 05 Jan 2013
- views: 6109281
1:13
Yma Sumac In Her Duet With A Flute - Insane Harmonization
Pretty insane, no?
Every single note here was so perfectly executed that you need to watch in slow to notice the greatness of this harmony.
Left: The main note...
Pretty insane, no?
Every single note here was so perfectly executed that you need to watch in slow to notice the greatness of this harmony.
Left: The main note played in the flute.
Right: Yma's notes.
Live in Moscow, Russia (1960)
https://wn.com/Yma_Sumac_In_Her_Duet_With_A_Flute_Insane_Harmonization
Pretty insane, no?
Every single note here was so perfectly executed that you need to watch in slow to notice the greatness of this harmony.
Left: The main note played in the flute.
Right: Yma's notes.
Live in Moscow, Russia (1960)
- published: 14 Aug 2017
- views: 1079374
3:37
Yma Súmac - Chuncho (1958) (HD) (Audio Remasterizado)
El 17 de julio de 1958 se estrenó la película mexicana "Música de siempre", dirigida por el chileno Tito Davison y escrita por el mexicano Alfonso Patiño Gómez,...
El 17 de julio de 1958 se estrenó la película mexicana "Música de siempre", dirigida por el chileno Tito Davison y escrita por el mexicano Alfonso Patiño Gómez, protagonizada por estrellas internacionales como Édith Piaf, Amália Rodrigues, Libertad Lamarque, Yma Súmac y demás. El largometraje es una secuencia de actos musicales interpretados por artistas de Latinoamérica y Europa.
Es la cuarta película de la carrera de la princesa inca, interpretó "Chuncho", lanzado en su tercer álbum "Inca Taqui" de 1953, donde logró desarrollar la "doble voz" o "triple coloratura", la misma que se asemeja al trinar de las aves. La cantante peruana consideró este tema como el más "completo" de su discografía. Su primera versión se llamó "Birds" en 1951 y formó parte de la banda sonora de la obra de Broadway "Flahooley", compuesta por Sammy Fain y arreglada por Moisés Vivanco.
#ymasumac #peru #amazonas
https://wn.com/Yma_Súmac_Chuncho_(1958)_(Hd)_(Audio_Remasterizado)
El 17 de julio de 1958 se estrenó la película mexicana "Música de siempre", dirigida por el chileno Tito Davison y escrita por el mexicano Alfonso Patiño Gómez, protagonizada por estrellas internacionales como Édith Piaf, Amália Rodrigues, Libertad Lamarque, Yma Súmac y demás. El largometraje es una secuencia de actos musicales interpretados por artistas de Latinoamérica y Europa.
Es la cuarta película de la carrera de la princesa inca, interpretó "Chuncho", lanzado en su tercer álbum "Inca Taqui" de 1953, donde logró desarrollar la "doble voz" o "triple coloratura", la misma que se asemeja al trinar de las aves. La cantante peruana consideró este tema como el más "completo" de su discografía. Su primera versión se llamó "Birds" en 1951 y formó parte de la banda sonora de la obra de Broadway "Flahooley", compuesta por Sammy Fain y arreglada por Moisés Vivanco.
#ymasumac #peru #amazonas
- published: 16 Sep 2023
- views: 71555
4:48
Yma Sumac on David Letterman Show (1987)
1987 Yma Sumac performance and interview with David Letterman.
1987 Yma Sumac performance and interview with David Letterman.
https://wn.com/Yma_Sumac_On_David_Letterman_Show_(1987)
1987 Yma Sumac performance and interview with David Letterman.
- published: 10 Nov 2008
- views: 921016
3:18
Yma Sumac - Vírgenes del Sol 1944
Esta canción carece en sí de una letra por lo que más es el instrumental, lleva el sello de la Discografía Odeon de 1944. Lo realiza a lado de Moisés Vivanco qu...
Esta canción carece en sí de una letra por lo que más es el instrumental, lleva el sello de la Discografía Odeon de 1944. Lo realiza a lado de Moisés Vivanco quien fue su esposo.
Ésta es una canción de Jazz Incaico
https://wn.com/Yma_Sumac_Vírgenes_Del_Sol_1944
Esta canción carece en sí de una letra por lo que más es el instrumental, lleva el sello de la Discografía Odeon de 1944. Lo realiza a lado de Moisés Vivanco quien fue su esposo.
Ésta es una canción de Jazz Incaico
- published: 01 Mar 2012
- views: 4499398
3:10
El cóndor pasa (Huayno) - Yma Sumac
Song taken from the album "La voz" (the voice) by Yma Sumac. Yma was an outstanding singer (5/8 chords) who was born in Perú though known worldwide for her uniq...
Song taken from the album "La voz" (the voice) by Yma Sumac. Yma was an outstanding singer (5/8 chords) who was born in Perú though known worldwide for her unique talent.
Subscribe if you like this kind of music.
No copyright infringement intended, I do not own this video copyrights nor the music used in it. This was uploaded for the sole reason of sharing this great artist to the world.
http://yma-sumac.com/yma_Sumac_store.html
https://wn.com/El_Cóndor_Pasa_(Huayno)_Yma_Sumac
Song taken from the album "La voz" (the voice) by Yma Sumac. Yma was an outstanding singer (5/8 chords) who was born in Perú though known worldwide for her unique talent.
Subscribe if you like this kind of music.
No copyright infringement intended, I do not own this video copyrights nor the music used in it. This was uploaded for the sole reason of sharing this great artist to the world.
http://yma-sumac.com/yma_Sumac_store.html
- published: 21 Oct 2012
- views: 1325771
2:12
TUMPA - Yma Sumac | Original - HD
TUMPA - Yma Sumac | Original - HD
Únete a nuestros siguientes grupos para mas información sobre la princesa Inca:
SUSCRIBETE A MI CANAL, de respaldo @RicardoQui...
TUMPA - Yma Sumac | Original - HD
Únete a nuestros siguientes grupos para mas información sobre la princesa Inca:
SUSCRIBETE A MI CANAL, de respaldo @RicardoQuispeTV
¡El pueblo unido jamás sera vencido!
https://wn.com/Tumpa_Yma_Sumac_|_Original_Hd
TUMPA - Yma Sumac | Original - HD
Únete a nuestros siguientes grupos para mas información sobre la princesa Inca:
SUSCRIBETE A MI CANAL, de respaldo @RicardoQuispeTV
¡El pueblo unido jamás sera vencido!
- published: 08 Mar 2023
- views: 9392
3:38
Yma Sumac, The Peruvian Songbird, sings "Chuncho."
In a piece of classic exotica, the unique Yma Sumac (1922-2008) displays her most unusual voice. I, like many, have mixed feelings about Sumac (whose name, in ...
In a piece of classic exotica, the unique Yma Sumac (1922-2008) displays her most unusual voice. I, like many, have mixed feelings about Sumac (whose name, in Quechua, means 'How beautiful!") Some feel there was a potentially great operatic voice here,had it been trained as such. However, the decision was made to frame her performance as essentially a presentation of exotica. To a certain extent, Ivan Rebroff made the same decision.
One cannot gainsay the past, but there is ample evidence of an extraordinary voice here, that much is certain.
https://wn.com/Yma_Sumac,_The_Peruvian_Songbird,_Sings_Chuncho.
In a piece of classic exotica, the unique Yma Sumac (1922-2008) displays her most unusual voice. I, like many, have mixed feelings about Sumac (whose name, in Quechua, means 'How beautiful!") Some feel there was a potentially great operatic voice here,had it been trained as such. However, the decision was made to frame her performance as essentially a presentation of exotica. To a certain extent, Ivan Rebroff made the same decision.
One cannot gainsay the past, but there is ample evidence of an extraordinary voice here, that much is certain.
- published: 06 May 2010
- views: 1187707
3:58
Yma Sumac sings Queen of the Night and Clair de Lune
Purchase here: https://www.yma-sumac.com/music
The extraordinary Yma Sumac sings Mozart's Queen of the Night aria in her own style and then a never before sun...
Purchase here: https://www.yma-sumac.com/music
The extraordinary Yma Sumac sings Mozart's Queen of the Night aria in her own style and then a never before sung rendition of Debussy's Clair de Lune. Both are live recordings from her own archives, donated to her official website. Both tracks in their entirety are available for download (or on the CD 'The Voice') at www.yma-sumac.com .
All images and music ©Damon Devine/Official Yma Sumac Archives of www.yma-sumac.com
https://wn.com/Yma_Sumac_Sings_Queen_Of_The_Night_And_Clair_De_Lune
Purchase here: https://www.yma-sumac.com/music
The extraordinary Yma Sumac sings Mozart's Queen of the Night aria in her own style and then a never before sung rendition of Debussy's Clair de Lune. Both are live recordings from her own archives, donated to her official website. Both tracks in their entirety are available for download (or on the CD 'The Voice') at www.yma-sumac.com .
All images and music ©Damon Devine/Official Yma Sumac Archives of www.yma-sumac.com
- published: 17 Nov 2018
- views: 364060
3:44
Yma Sumac sings Taita Inty "Hymn of the Sun Virgin" 1950. The Colgate Comedy Hour.
Eddie Cantor introduces Yma Sumac who sings an Inca hymn, a thousand years old, entitled "Hymn to the Sun Virgin". Air date September 9, 1950, a live performanc...
Eddie Cantor introduces Yma Sumac who sings an Inca hymn, a thousand years old, entitled "Hymn to the Sun Virgin". Air date September 9, 1950, a live performance on the first Colgate Comedy Hour. She became an international success based on her extreme vocal range. Yma Sumac sold more than 40 million records which makes her one of the best-selling Latin Americans in history and the best-selling Peruvian in history. She was one of the most famous exponents of exotica music during the 1950s. Mastered from 16mm kinescope film.
https://wn.com/Yma_Sumac_Sings_Taita_Inty_Hymn_Of_The_Sun_Virgin_1950._The_Colgate_Comedy_Hour.
Eddie Cantor introduces Yma Sumac who sings an Inca hymn, a thousand years old, entitled "Hymn to the Sun Virgin". Air date September 9, 1950, a live performance on the first Colgate Comedy Hour. She became an international success based on her extreme vocal range. Yma Sumac sold more than 40 million records which makes her one of the best-selling Latin Americans in history and the best-selling Peruvian in history. She was one of the most famous exponents of exotica music during the 1950s. Mastered from 16mm kinescope film.
- published: 03 Apr 2022
- views: 160883