, founded in 1960, renewed the ways of interpreting folklore. In the picture, the 1963 line-up:
Chango Farías Gómez,
Carlos Coco del Franco Terrero, Marián Farías Gómez (replacing
Hernán Figueroa Reyes),
Guillermo Urien and
Pedro Farías Gómez. In the 1960s, the folklore boom would be amplified with the launching of large folkloric music festivals such as the
Cosquín Festival (1961) and the
Festival de Jesús María (1966), but above all with the appearance and massive diffusion of renovating musical forms, in a process of continental range, adopted denominations such as "
new Latin American song", "folkloric projection" and "dynamic folklore" or acronyms such as MPA (
Música Popular Argentina, Argentine Popular Music), with its equivalents in other South American countries such as Brazil (MPB) and Uruguay (MPU). In 1968, the music critic Miguel Smirnoff, when presenting the album of the
Cuarteto Vocal Zupay published under the suggestive title of
Folklore sin mirar atrás Vol. 2, stated the following: In 1960,
Chango Farías Gómez formed
Los Huanca Huá, a vocal group that, through the introduction of complex
polyphonic arrangements, would profoundly renew folkloric music in Argentina and Latin America. Los Huanca Hua, in its initial formation, was also integrated by
Pedro Farías Gómez —who would assume the leadership since 1966—,
Hernán Figueroa Reyes —replaced shortly after by the remarkable singer Marián Farías Gómez—,
Carlos del Franco Terrero and
Guillermo Urien.
Choral folklore already had antecedents such as the surprising precursor experience of the
Cuarteto Gómez Carrillo in the 1940s and 1950s, or the ensemble
Llajta Sumac,
Los Andariegos, the Cuarteto Contemporáneo, the
Conjunto Universitario "Achalay" of La Plata, and
Los Trovadores del Norte (
Puente Pexoa), already in the 1950s. But it would be the success of Los Huanca Hua that would impulse the formation of vocal groups in Argentina. Up to that moment, most of the groups worked with two voices, exceptionally with three voices. Vocal groups —intimately related to a less visible but far-reaching process of choir development— began to introduce fourth and fifth voices,
counterpoint,
contracantos and in general to explore the musical tools of
polyphony and old musical forms designed for singing, such as the
madrigal, the
cantata, the
motet, among others. Following the innovative possibilities for folkloric and popular music opened up by vocal arrangements, several vocal groups were created, such as the
Grupo Vocal Argentino, the
Cuarteto Zupay (
Marcha de San Lorenzo),
Los Trovadores (
Platerito),
Quinteto Tiempo,
Opus Cuatro (
A la mina no voy),
Contracanto,
Markama (
Zamba landó),
Huerque Mapu,
Buenos Aires 8,
Quinteto Santa Fe,
Cantoral,
Anacrusa,
Santaires, De los Pueblos, Intimayu, and others. The movement spread to other countries of the region, mainly to Chile where, almost simultaneously to the Argentinean case, the
Neofolkloric movement exploded, with groups such as
Los Cuatro Cuartos,
Las Cuatro Brujas,
Los de Ramon, and so on. Around the same time,
Quilapayún was created and its maximum work, the
Cantata de Santa María de Iquique (1969), of enormous influence in all Hispanic America. Also in 1960, on the occasion of the 150th anniversary of the
May Revolution,
Waldo de los Ríos —son of the remarkable singer
Martha de los Ríos (
La Shalaca)—, performed and recorded in an album his
Concierto de las 14 provincias, starting a musical expression that would boldly combine modern music with folkloric rhythms, which would later be manifested in several albums and the quintet Los Waldos, highlighting his song
Tero-tero. A similar path would be followed by
Eduardo Lagos. Soon after, the duo Leda y María, formed by
María Elena Walsh and
Leda Valladares, presented the shows
Canciones para mirar (1962) and
Doña Disparate y Bambuco (1963), which "marked a milestone in the cultural history of the 1960s". From there emerged a much more open way of understanding folkloric music and, above all, a series of songs and children's characters that shaped several generations, with classics such as
Manuelita,
La vaca estuda in
baguala style,
El reino del revés in
carnavalito form, among many others. Separated from María Elena Walsh,
Leda Valladares devoted herself to compile and recreate the Andean ancestral song —which years later she would refer to as
"a scream in the sky" (
in Spanish: grito en el cielo)—, to compile the Argentine Musical Map (
in Spanish: Mapa Musical Argentino), recorded in eleven albums released in that decade. In 1962, Los Huanca Hua won the award
Revelación Cosquín along with the trio
Tres para el folklore (
Luis Amaya,
Chito Zeballos and
Lalo Homer), who released that same year the album EP
Guitarreando, —including an anthological interpretation of the
Paraguayan classic
Pájaro campana— profoundly renewing the use of guitars in folkloric music and which would become the model to be followed. Almost simultaneously, a group of musicians based in
Mendoza, led by
Mercedes Sosa,
Armando Tejada Gómez and
Oscar Matus, launched the
Movimiento del Nuevo Cancionero, vindicating figures of Argentine folklore who had remained marginalized, such as
Atahualpa Yupanqui and
Buenaventura Luna, the need to end the tango-folklore confrontation, and the proposal to design a "national" and Latin American songbook, open to all styles, but at the same time avoiding purely commercial music. Although many folklorists did not strictly adhere to the Movimiento del Nuevo Cancionero, its generic impact completely renewed the Argentine songs, opening the field to what would be called
Argentine popular music (MPA), a concept created with the purpose of overcoming the folklore-tango antinomy or the traditional music-modern music opposition.
The Movimiento del Nuevo Cancionero was also projected as a Latin American musical movement, forming part of the
Movimiento de la Nueva Canción. Some of the many artists who expressly adhered to the Nuevo Cancionero movement include
César Isella,
Hamlet Lima Quintana (
Zamba para no morir),
Ramón Ayala (
El mensú),
Los Andariegos,
Quinteto Tiempo (
Quien te amaba ya se va),
Las Voces Blancas (
Pastor de nubes),
Horacio Guarany (
Si se calla el cantor, Si el vino viene), the songwriting duo of
Cuchi Leguizamón and
Manuel J. Castilla (
Balderrama, La Pomeña),
Hermanos Núñez (
Chacarera del 55),
Ariel Petrocelli (
Cuando tenga la tierra),
Daniel Toro (
Zamba para olvidarte),
Chito Zeballos (
Zamba de los mineros), and others. . Cover of his influential album
Así nos gusta (1969), manifesto of the
folkloric projection. Another renovating line of folklore, called
folkloric projection music, had outstanding exponents, such as the aforementioned
Waldo de los Ríos and
Eduardo Lagos. Lagos, who had already expressed his renovating vision in songs such as the chacarera
La oncena (1956), would record in 1969 the album
Así nos gusta (1969), with the participation of
Astor Piazzolla, which would strongly influence the new musical tendencies of folklore. Lagos was also the axis of a series of meetings of improvisation and informal folkloric experimentation in his house, humorously baptized by
Hugo Díaz as
folkloréishons, which in the manner of
jazz jam sessions, used to gather Lagos, Piazzola and Díaz, with other musicians such as
Domingo Cura,
Oscar Cardozo Ocampo,
Alfredo Remus and
Oscar López Ruiz, among others. At that time Lagos wrote: Other outstanding folklorists of the period are the
charanguist Jaime Torres, the
quenist Uña Ramos, the percussionist
Domingo Cura,
Jorge Cafrune (El orejano, Virgen india),
Carlos Di Fulvio (
Guitarrero),
Los del Suquía (
De Alberdi),
Los Visconti (Mama vieja),
Los Manseros Santiagueños (
Añoranzas), the bombist and singer
Chango Nieto (
Zamba a Monteros), the
Chango Rodríguez (
Luna cautiva),
Hernán Figueroa Reyes (
El corralero de Sergio Sauvalle),
Las Voces de Orán (
Zamba del fuellista),
Suma Paz,
Los Carabajal (Un domingo santiagueño),
Los Arroyeños (
Que se vengan los chicos),
Los Indios Tacunau, Argentine-Paraguayan musician
Oscar Cardozo Ocampo (Zamba del nuevo día),
harmonica player
Hugo Díaz,
Coco Díaz ("
Para ti a conta"). "Cuchi" Leguizamón and the
Dúo Salteño bring with their interpretations an evolution in melodic, harmonic and poetic aspects. Among the interpreters of
southern or surera music,
José Larralde (
Herencia para un hijo gaucho),
Argentino Luna (
Mire qué lindo es mi país paisano),
Alberto Merlo (
La Vuelta de Obligado),
Roberto Rimoldi Fraga (
Argentino hasta la muerte),
Omar Moreno Palacios (Sencillito y de alpargatas), among others, stood out. In the Patagonian singing, the poet
Marcelo Berbel (
La Pasto Verde) and his sons, the Berbel Brothers
(Quimey Neuquén) stood out, while in the littoral music Cacho Saucedo
(Sapukay de triunfo macho), María Helena
(Canto islero), the
accordionist
Raúl Barboza and Los Hermanos Cuesta
(Juan de Gualeyán) appeared. In 1964
Jorge Cafrune got to know through Los Hermanos Albarracín a zamba composed by a construction businessman from Mendoza, fond of folklore, and decided to include it in his second album. The song was
Zamba de mi esperanza, by
Luis Profili, recorded under the pseudonym
Luis H. Morales, and would become, with
Merceditas, the most popular song in Argentine folkloric music, both nationally and internationally. , probably the most important composer of Argentine folk music. Author of the
Misa Criolla, Mujeres Argentinas, Cantata Sudamericana, and songs like
Alfonsina y el mar, Juana Azurduy, Antiguos dueños de flechas, and others. In 1965 the film
Cosquín, amor y folklore by Delfor María Beccaglia was released, with the performances of
Elsa Daniel and
Atilio Marinelli and the interpretation of musical themes by the main artists of folklore such as
Atahualpa Yupanqui,
Los Chalchaleros,
Los Fronterizos,
Los Cantores de Quilla Huasi,
Los Huanca Hua,
Los Trovadores,
Eduardo Falú,
Ramona Galarza,
Ariel Ramírez,
El Chúcaro and
Norma Viola,
Los Cantores del Alba,
El Chango Nieto,
Jorge Cafrune,
Tomás Tutú Campos, Los Arribeños,
Los de Salta, among others. In 1968
Coco Díaz and
Carlos Carabajal composed
El mimoso which would become a big hit in the 70s: "
¿De quién es esa boquita? Tuyita tuyita", would become a popular saying. Probably one of the high points of that stage was
Canción con todos (1969), composed by
César Isella and
Armando Tejada Gómez and sung by
Mercedes Sosa, which has virtually become the Hymn of Latin America. This period also saw attempts to link folklore more closely with other manifestations of Argentine and Latin American popular music. Among them, exchanges with the so-called
national rock, such as those made by the band
Arco Iris, led by
Gustavo Santaolalla, especially in his album
Sudamérica o el regreso a la Aurora (1972),
Roque Narvaja (Chimango, 1975),
León Gieco and
Víctor Heredia. Also noteworthy were the albums of
Los Cantores de Quilla Huasi dedicated entirely to
tango (originally released in 1972 in
Japan under the title
La cumparsita and re-released in 1975 in Argentina as
Tangos por Los Cantores de Quilla Huasi) and of
Los Cantores del Alba interpreting
Mexican songs, in the series
Entre gauchos y mariachis, released between 1975 and 1977. In 1969 he composed the music for
Canción con todos, with lyrics by poet Armando Tejada Gómez, declared "Anthem of Latin America" by
Unesco in 1990, later Tejada Gómez would be one of the most persecuted singer-songwriters of the self-styled Proceso de Reorganización Nacional (National Reorganization Process), In 1972 and 1973, the films
Argentinísima and
Argentinísima II, by
Fernando Ayala and
Héctor Olivera, musical-folkloric documentaries, were released, filmed in natural sceneries all over the country, with the participation of the main artists of Argentine folklore.
collective Canto Popular Urbano'' (CPU) performing a tribute to
Pablo Neruda in
Buenos Aires, 1973. The famous live concerts performed by the American musician
Paul Simon with the
Urubamba group, formed by the Argentines Jorge Milchberg (
charango),
Uña Ramos (
quena and
siku) and
Jorge Cumbo (flute), and the Uruguayan Emilio Arteaga (percussion), date from 1973 and 1974. Their success brought Andean music to worldwide acclaim and made
El cóndor pasa the best known song of Indo-American folklore. The recitals are recorded in two albums:
Paul Simon in Concert: Live Rhymin with the records of the two recitals performed at the
Royal Albert Hall in London in June 1973, and ''Paul Simon in concert live composin' and the Band'', recorded in Tokyo on February 20, 1974. In September 1974, the government of President
María Estela Martínez de Perón kidnapped and destroyed the master and discs of the
Misa para el Tercer Mundo, performed by the
Grupo Vocal Argentino Nuevo, with music by Roberto Lar and texts by the priest
Carlos Mugica, the latter murdered a few months earlier by the terrorist organization
Triple A. The work was preserved from the beginning of 1974, in few units that had been distributed and was only performed again in 2007. Some of the great works of this stage are: • the album
Concierto de las 14 provincias (1960), by
Waldo de los Ríos; • the album
Folklore en Nueva Dimensión (1964), by
Ariel Ramírez,
Jaime Torres and
Domingo Cura; • the album
El Chacho. Vida y muerte de un caudillo (1965), by
Jorge Cafrune, complete work with lyrics by
León Benarós and music by
Eduardo Falú,
Carlos Di Fulvio,
Ramón Navarro and
Adolfo Ábalos; • the album
Misa Criolla (1965), by Ariel Ramírez,
Los Fronterizos and
Jaime Torres in the
charango, choir and orchestra; • the album
Romance a la muerte de Juan Lavalle (1965), work by
Eduardo Falú and
Ernesto Sabato; • the album
Folklore sin mirar atrás (1967), by
Cuarteto Vocal Zupay; • the album
Folklore dinámico (1967), by Los Waldos, published in España; • the tour
De a caballo por mi Patria (1967), made by
Jorge Cafrune in homage to
Chacho Peñaloza, with this composition he toured all over the country; • the album
Juguemos en el mundo (1968), by
María Elena Walsh, which contains
Serenata para la tierra de uno; • the album
Canto Monumento (1968), by
Carlos Di Fulvio, one of the great integral works of the musician from Córdoba; • the album
Así nos gusta (1968), by
Eduardo Lagos, with
Astor Piazzolla,
Hugo Díaz and
Oscar Alem; • the album
El mimoso (1968), by
Coco Díaz • the album
Mujeres Argentinas (1969), by
Ariel Ramírez and
Félix Luna, performed by the singer
Mercedes Sosa and the organist Héctor Zeoli, including, among others, the theme song
Alfonsina y el mar; • the album
Dúo Salteño (1969) the first album with songs such as
La Pomeña, Pastorcita perdida, La Arenosa. This duet marked an innovation with their voices and the harmony of Cuchi Leguizamón. • the album
El Canto de Salta (1971), by
Dúo Salteño, with Gustavo "Cuchi" Leguizamón featuring
Zamba de Balderrama • the album
Homenaje a Violeta Parra (1971), by Mercedes Sosa, featuring
Gracias a la vida; • the album
El arte de la quena (1971), by
Uña Ramos; • the album
Camerata Bariloche: Eduardo Falú (1972), that recorded the performance of Eduardo Falú's
Suite Argentina para guitarra, cuerdas, corno y clavecín, and Carlos Guastavino's
Jeromita Linares, performed the previous year by
Camerata Bariloche and
Eduardo Falú at the
Teatro General San Martín in Buenos Aires, with orchestration by
Oscar Cardozo Ocampo. • the album
Las Voces Blancas cantan Atahualpa Yupanqui (1972), by
Las Voces Blancas, first album entirely dedicated to
Atahualpa Yupanqui, the greatest Argentine folklorist. • the album
Anacrusa (1973), by
Anacrusa group. • el espectáculo dramático-musical
El inglés, by
Juan Carlos Gené and music by
Rubén Verna and
Oscar Cardozo Ocampo, interpreted by
Cuarteto Zupay and
Pepe Soriano (1974). == Folkloric music during the military dictatorship of 1976 ==