La Negra Graciana

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
La Guacamaya 00:00 Tools
Moliendo Café 00:00 Tools
La Bamba 00:00 Tools
El Torito 00:00 Tools
La Iguana 00:00 Tools
El Cascabel 00:00 Tools
El Butaquito 00:00 Tools
El Pájaro Cú 00:00 Tools
La Morena 00:00 Tools
La Vieja 00:00 Tools
La Tuza 00:00 Tools
El Siquisirí 00:00 Tools
El Canelo 00:00 Tools
El Ahualulco 00:00 Tools
El Jarabe Loco 00:00 Tools
La Tienda 00:00 Tools
El Pájaro Carpintero 00:00 Tools
El Balajú 00:00 Tools
La María Chuchena 00:00 Tools
El Siquisiri 00:00 Tools
Estampas Jarochas 00:00 Tools
La bruja 00:00 Tools
El Puntalito 00:00 Tools
El coco 00:00 Tools
La manta 00:00 Tools
El buscapies 00:00 Tools
El Pájaro Cu 00:00 Tools
La candela 00:00 Tools
La indita 00:00 Tools
El conejo 00:00 Tools
El Pajaro Cu 00:00 Tools
El Pajaro Carpintero 00:00 Tools
La Maria Chuchena 00:00 Tools
El Tilingo Lingo 00:00 Tools
El Párajo Cú 00:00 Tools
El Querreque 03:22 Tools
Decimas del Casamiento 00:00 Tools
El gavilanchillo 00:00 Tools
El Balaju 00:00 Tools
El Torito Jarocho 00:00 Tools
El Colas 00:00 Tools
El toro sacamandu 00:00 Tools
María Chuchena 00:00 Tools
Canto a veracruz 00:00 Tools
El colás 00:00 Tools
El Ahuelulco 00:00 Tools
El gavilancillo 00:00 Tools
La Morena (A Woman With Tan Skin) 00:00 Tools
El Toro Sacamandú 00:00 Tools
Estampas Jarochas (Jarocha Images) 00:00 Tools
Canto a Veracruz (Song to Veracruz) 00:00 Tools
El Cascabel (The Tinker Bell) 00:00 Tools
Décimas del casamiento 00:00 Tools
El Puntalito (The Little Morsel) 00:00 Tools
El Torito Jarocho (The Little Bull Jarocho) 00:00 Tools
La Iguana (The Iguana) 00:00 Tools
El Páeajo Cú (The Bird Cú) 00:00 Tools
Canto Veracruz 00:00 Tools
Guacamaya 00:00 Tools
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Nicknamed "La Negra Graciana" due to her African heritage, harpist and vocalist Graciana Silva is a treasure of Mexican song jarocho from her native Veracruz. Born in the 1930s, she began playing the harp at 10 but would not record her first album until 1995, preferring to stay close to home and maintain an active performing career with her father and brothers. She has been dubbed the "First Lady of son jarocho," and much like her Cape Verdian counterpart Cesaria Evora would wait until her 60s to receive worldwide acclaim. For most of her life Silva devoted herself to playing in festivals and local venues in her home state of Veracruz, dragging her harp around with her alongside her family members. As a child she was mentored by a blind musician named Rodrigo Rodríguez, who actually began teaching Silva's brother. Upon hearing the sound of the harp, Silva found her musical calling, and went on to become one of the leading exponents of the regional son jarocho form. It was on one fateful day that Corason record label owner Eduardo Lleranas saw her performing and immediately commenced to record "La Negra" along with her brother and sister-in-law in their modest turkey farm-turned-recording studio. She has since toured the U.S., Mexico and Europe, and enjoys preserving the authentic, "old-school" playing techniques on her 38-stringed harp instrument, the arpa jarocha. Her style is more traditional for the instrument in that she uses the harp primarily for accompaniment to her vocals, but has also evolved the techniques with fast, virtuoso playing and rapid key changes. Silva is also regarded for her creative and improvisational singing of décima verses which include social as well as political commentary sprinkled with a dash of irony and much humor. Her performing ensemble features the traditional instruments of the son jarocho genre, including arpa jarocha (sometimes two in a group), as well as the jarana and requinto guitars. Silva's high-energy performances often include dancers as an important element in her presentation of the traditional son jarocho form, which embellishes the group's texture with the regional zapateado (footwork). Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.