Carnaval Del Pueblo is the largest single Latin American festival event in Europe, exploding onto Burgess Park this year in a huge celebration of colour, music and Latin flavours. Prepare to party in true Latin fashion during a day of free fun and festivities this summer.
Burgess Park will be transformed into an oasis of Latin culture, with traditional entertainment, food, crafts and more throughout the day. The crowds will be out to party in a vibrant festival atmosphere, bubbling with Latin rhythms and flavour. A parade of floats and costumed dancers will make its way to the park from Elephant and Castle, featuring dancers, floats and entertainers.
A selection of concerts will take place on the main stage, presenting a selection of live acts in the sun. Crowds can party down with some international merengue and salsa stars. The Lebron Brothers will be performing this year, and you can sample other acts from Paraguay, Brazil, Cuba and other Latin American countries at Carnaval del Pueblo 2010.
Burgess Park will be bubbling with song and dance during a day of fun and festivities, with plenty to see and do for visitors of all ages. A selection of well known musicians and artists will be taking part in events on the day including artists from Brazil and the Dominican Republic. The crowds can enjoy world class entertainment and have a go themselves in an upbeat party atmosphere.
This year’s Carnaval Del Pueblo is expected to be one of the biggest ever, attracting streams of partygoers to South London for a colourful day of music and merriment. A salsa dancing Guinness World Record attempt is set to take place, and the local community and visitors to the area can come together to celebrate Latin culture in the sun at what promises to be one of the biggest festival dates of the year.
Carnaval Del Pueblo 2010 takes place at Burgess Park, Camberwell on Sunday 1st August. Events at Burgess Park continue until 10pm.
The carnival procession begins at Elephant and Castle at 12pm and will make its way along Walworth Road and Albany Road, finishing at Burgess Park at roughly 3pm. All events are free to attend.
On the edge of the Amazon in the 1960s, a sound emerged that united Peru’s indigenous melodies with Colombia’s highly-danceable cumbia rhythm, surf rock wah-wah pedals, and rock and roll’s organ-playing. These cumbias amazonicas migrated to Lima and became chicha, the soundtrack of empowerment for the era’s newly urbanized indigenous population. The Roots of Chicha: Psychedelic Cumbias from Peru on Barbès Records features six of the most compelling bands from the scene, before the sound became watered down with pop aesthetics and cheesy synthesizers.
The kangaroo, a beloved national symbol of Australia, may in fact be an ancient interloper.
This project strives to improve housing and living conditions in order to get families on the path to a better future and ultimately change their lives. It offers a unique cultural experience. Volunteers share intensive work time with local masons, and have the opportunity to witness first-hand the lives of a disadvantaged family, all while contributing to improve their lives through the building of a new house. Construction volunteers get involved in digging foundations, mixing concrete and generally helping the masons in their tasks. It takes approximately two weeks to build a complete house and volunteers are encouraged to work for this length of time in order to be part of constructing a complete home.
Sérgio and Odair Assad’s Nonesuch album Jardim Abandonado (Abandoned Garden) was apparently in the pipeline for some time; part of it was recorded in 2002 and the rest in 2006. This mixed programme of works ranging from Debussy to music written by Sergio Assad’s daughter Clarice was certainly worth the wait. This beautifully recorded album, with a breathtaking photograph by French master Eugène Atget gracing its front cover, is eminently listenable and seamlessly moves through works of Jobim, Milhaud, Debussy, and Sérgio Assad’s arrangement of Gershwin’s ‘Rhapsody in Blue’ without missing a beat. Among the most striking aspects of Jardim Abandonado is the selection of contemporary pieces included, which are sunk in among the more familiar stuff – three radiant duets by Clarice Assad, a bracing and rhythmically palpitating long form piece by Sérgio Assad himself, and an instrumental work entitled ‘Octet’ written by Broadway composer Adam Guettel.
Steaks are strictly off the menu at Sattva restaurant in Buenos Aires, an organic, meat-free eatery that caters to a rare breed of Argentine diner: the vegetarian.
Argentina is faced with a critical shortage of manpower to man its prisons – in one prison, instead of 15 guards, they have only two. Hence they employ dummy guards – they place a football with the cap of a guard on top of it – from a distance it gives the impression that a guard is present. But it is not easy to fool the prisoners – two of them who were serving sentences for armed robbery made good their escape from the prison in the Neuquen province. The escaped convicts are still on the run.
Colombia celebrated the 200th anniversary of the start of the movement to win independence from Spain yesterday.
Throughout most of the world, lightning is a rare occurrence. Residents of certain locales can go years and even decades without ever glimpsing a single bolt. However, there is a region in South America where you can witness a mighty and spectacular lightning display for almost half the year. This region hosts the world’s greatest natural light show; the Catatumbo Lightning.
Colca Canyon is located in southern Peru. It is more than twice as deep as the Grand Canyon but it is not as deep as its sister Cotahuasi Canyon. The canyon was created by the Colca River which starts high in the Andes mountains flowing through the canyon and changing names twice before flowing into the Pacific Ocean.