We traveled through the veins of the
bolero ranchero, the Scottish indie pop, we took a walk in the notes of the
Venezuelan popular music, Latin jazz, huapango ranchero, Colombian Caribbean
folk music and we even danced to cumbia from Tamaulipas and rock of the deceased
and always remembered, Rigo Tovar.
The sceneries and atmospheres of this show took us to
the hospital bed of Gustavo Cerati and we saw ourselves singing with the Javier
Solis’ hat on and we danced on stage with the Jamaican ska chords of the
"New York Ska Jazz Ensemble ".
One of the artistic lives rich in anecdotes is of
composer and singer Edith Piaf, who was born in the streets, under a
streetlight in front of the 72 of the street Belleville in French. Once she born into
the world, she was breastfed with wine and milk because her maternal
grandmother thought that alcohol eliminated microbes. She was raised by prostitutes in a brothel in
Bernay in the Normandy region, which belonged to her paternal grandmother.
After the death of the also actress, the 14
years old girl becomes independent of his father and goes to live in the
Clermont Hotel, located in the Montmartre area. She died on October 10th, 1963. The singer Charles
Aznavour said that the traffic had not stopped that way in Paris since the
Second World War. This singer is remembered by the phrase: "The show must
go on."
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