Search
Peter Bradley Adams
October 16thPeter Bradley Adams
October 17thIndigenous Heritage Celebration featuring Innastate
October 19thA Word with Writers: Christopher Paolini
October 20thHataałii
October 23rdMariachi Azteca de Santa Fe
October 26thKassa Overall
October 26thKassa Overall and The Boomroots Collective
October 27thOUTREACH - Kassa Overall
October 28thCimafunk
October 30thCoco Montoya
November 2ndArkansauce
November 7thInnastate
November 9thThe Real Matt Jones
November 14thLOL Comedy Fundraiser
November 14thZoë Keating
November 15thKristina Jacobsen
November 17thTopHouse
November 21stHolly Near with Jan Martinelli
November 23rdHolly Near with Jan Martinelli
November 24thCheryl Wheeler with Kenny White
December 4thCheryl Wheeler with Kenny White
December 5thIris DeMent
December 5thClay Street Unit
December 6thLaurianne Fiorentino & Michael Kott
December 11thLaurianne Fiorentino & Michael Kott
December 11thMem Shannon
December 18thKalos
January 15thKalos
January 16thJesse Cook
February 2ndJesse Cook
February 3rdThe Ocean Blue
February 21stAlbert Castiglia
February 25thAlbert Castiglia
February 26thSadness, Madness, & Mayhem
March 1stAltan
March 12thLúnasa
March 18thYagody
March 29thYagody
March 30thLos Gaiteros de San Jacinto & Madalitso Band
at
National Hispanic Cultural Center - Fountain Courtyard
1701 4th St SW
Albuquerque NM 87102
(505) 724-4771
Other Events at National Hispanic Cultural Center - Fountain Courtyard
Add to Cal
Advance tickets cost $10 (plus a $2 service charge). Children 12 and under are free! Tickets are available from the NHCC Box Office (in person and by phone - (505) 724-4771).
We are all missing ¡Globalquerque! this year! To fill a piece of that void, we are partnering with the National Hispanic Cultural Center to offer a cool world music double bill that weekend in one of our favorite ¡Globalquerque! spaces—the NHCC's Fountain Courtyard! Los Gaiteros de San Jacinto played at the 8th ¡Globalquerque!, way back in 2012, while Madalitso will be enjoying their first visit to New Mexico. Santa Fe folks can enjoy the show at The Bridge too.
Deep in the Montes de María, on the shores of Colombia's Caribbean coast, with the advent of the Spanish conquest and the arrival of the enslaved African population, the sound of a new race was born. The native Kogi tribe descended from the snow-capped peaks with their flutes imitating the song of the birds, slaves introduced the overpowering cadence of their drums, and the Spaniards imposed their melancholic song to give birth to gaita music cradled in the tiny town of San Jacinto. Time slowly gave shape to the gaiteros as they sang to life, love, and suffering, as women's hips could not help following the drumbeat, and as listeners' souls would give in to the melancholic airs of the gaitas or reed flutes. Centuries of music and rum created Los Gaiteros de San Jacinto, the greatest maestros of this tradition.
Legend has it that Los Gaiteros de San Jacinto were formed around 1930. Founded by Miguel Antonio "Toño" Fernandez, they have preserved and disseminated their art for over five generations. Passing the torch from father to son, from uncle to nephew, this group has become one of Colombia's cultural treasures and the living expression of Latin America's history of strength, passion and survival.
With just an acoustic guitar and foot drum, an outsize, home-made, one-string babatone, two voices in sweet harmony and buckets of charm, Malawi's dynamic duo Madalitso Band have elevated audiences at WOMAD and Roskilde and a host of venues throughout Europe. Previously they had been earning a living playing on the streets of their home-town Lilongwe for ten years before they were discovered by a local producer and recorded their first album in 2009. Word-of-mouth eventually secured them an appearance at Zanzibar's Sauti Za Busara festival in 2017. Six months later they were on an airplane for the first time in their lives, heading for their first European tour.