El Carrao de Palmarito
El Carrao de Palmarito | |
---|---|
Birth name | Juan de los Santos Contreras |
Also known as | El Carrao de Palmarito Clarín de la Llanura |
Born | , Apure state, Venezuela | April 7, 1928
Died | December 10, 2002 Barinas, Barinas state, Venezuela | (aged 74)
Genres | Joropo |
Occupation(s) | musician, singer, composer |
Labels | Velvet Discomoda Cahilapo |
Associated acts | Ángel Custodio Loyola Sentimiento Apureño Joseíto Romero group |
Juan de los Santos Contreras; April 7, 1928 – December 10, 2002), was a Venezuelan singer. He was a llanero, specialising in the music of the Orinoco floodplains. He was better known by his stage name El Carrao de Palmarito which identifies him as the "limpkin" (a bird with a piercing call; Spanish: Carrao, Latin: Aramus guarauna) of Palmarito, his hometown.[1]
He became well known in the 1950s, making radio broadcasts and releasing his first disc on the Velvet label.[2] His most famous songs include the duet Florentino y el Diablo (based on the poema by Alberto Arvelo Torrealba), Aquella mujer que amé, Furia, Chaparralito llanero, Cajón del Arauca apureño, Llanura yo soy tu hijo, Plegaria llanera, Travesía de San Camilo, Faenas del llano, Dulce María, Mis retoños, El morrocoy de doña Carmen, Caminito de Arichuna, Recorriendo a Barinas, Los martirios del Carrao, El sueño de Julio Verne, Villavicencio.[2] Contreras received many awards, including Venezuela's National Prize of Popular Culture in 1998.[1] He died on December 10, 2002 in Barinas.
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b "Presidente Maduro rinde tributo a "El Carrao de Palmarito" a 90 años de su natalicio" [President Maduro pays tribute to "El Carrao de Palmarito" on the 90th anniversary of his birth] (in Spanish). April 2018. Retrieved May 1, 2021.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Musicallanera.net. "Juan de los Santos Contreras 'El carrao de Palmarito'". Retrieved April 20, 2008. (in Spanish)
- Música Llanera.com. "Juan de los Santos Contreras". Retrieved April 20, 2008. (in Spanish)
- 1928 births
- 2002 deaths
- Venezuelan composers
- Male composers
- Venezuelan folk singers
- Venezuelan male singers
- 20th-century Venezuelan singers
- 20th-century composers
- People from Apure
- 20th-century male singers