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#joropos
nerdy-arty · 29 days
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Venezuelan Miku!!
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~ The essential playlist, 3era temporada, 3er episodio: Stephanie Osorio
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Conecta tu radio mañana lunes 29 de 9 am a 11 am en CKUT 90.3 FM y disfruta de una nueva edición especial de ~ The essential playlist ~ ~ The essential playlist ~, 3ra temporada, 3er episodio presenta: Stephanie Osorio La cantante, músico y compositora Stephanie Osorio presentará un viaje a su inconsciente musical, encontrando la raíz misma de su despertar musical. Desde la primera canción que quiso tocar, el primer instrumento que tocó y su primer "cover" de Shakira en la escuela, Stephanie nos traerá hasta nuestros días, donde en Canadá emerge como una mujer inmigrante en la escena musical, produciendo un extraordinario álbum "Fruta del Corazón" y siendo en 2022 y 2023 aclamada como la artista femenina del año en el Canadian Latino Award! Boom ! Dj The most high
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homango · 1 year
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Va a bailar alma llanera en la exposición cultural de sexto grado (La abuela está emocionada)
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apamates · 1 year
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Music that's only made better by the video
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I only hold the deepest contempt towards that "latino" ballet and I get pissed whenever I see people praising it.
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wosoandstuff · 3 months
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tu ayer
Lit la vinotinto aplicó la de PÓNGANSE LAS ALPARGATAS QUE LO QUE SE VIENE ES JOROPO💃🏻
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archivevenezuela · 10 months
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Photo of Elie Herrera. Taken by Silvana Trevale for Vogue Mexico
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kiremii · 1 year
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arepa 👍
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gruposabana · 2 years
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#joropo con #elgruposabana en @loscapachos (en Los Capachos) https://www.instagram.com/p/Cp9H3u2A_wn/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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purpleglitch · 3 days
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Dream and George dancing el Sanjuanero 🇨🇴👨‍❤️‍💋‍👨
El Sanjuanero is a traditional dance and subgenre of Bambuco with Joropo influences. It's an important dance in colombian folklore and especially in the andean region because of the holidays in late June.
The dance represents the story of a relationship, It begins with flirting and courtship, goes through falling in love and ends with the symbol of marriage. 💚💙
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Thank you Nov @suenitos for hosting the collab this was so fun seeing everyone's cultures :3
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~ The essential playlist, 3ème saison, 3ème épisode: Stephanie Osorio
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Branchez vous radio ce lundi 29 de 9h à 11h sur CKUT 90.3 FM et profitez d'une nouvelle édition spéciale de ~ The essential playlist ~ ~ The essential playlist ~, 3e saison, 3e épisode présente : Stephanie Osorio La chanteuse, musicienne et compositrice Stephanie Osorio présentera un voyage dans son inconscient musical, trouvant la racine même de son éveil musical. Depuis la première chanson qu'elle a voulu jouer, le premier instrument qu'elle a joué et sa première reprise de Shakira à l'école, Stephanie nous emmènera jusqu'à aujourd'hui, où au Canada elle émerge en tant que femme immigrante sur la scène musicale, produisant un album extraordinaire "Fruta del Corazón" et étant en 2022 et 2023 revendiquée artiste féminine de l'année dans le cadre du Canadian Latino Award ! Boom ! Dj The most high
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folkfashion · 2 months
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Joropo dancers, Venezuela, by Silvana Trevale
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gadriezmannsgirl · 1 year
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Clash of Cultures -P.G
We can think of this one as Sister's Best Friend part II where we can see the insides of Gavi and Vnzlan!Reader relationship and his reactions to some stuffs. Warnings: Swear words and lots of Venezuelan slangs/acts/sayings and more
Summary: When Gavi's culture clashes with yours.
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The first Clash of Cultures in your relationship with Gavi was your way of speaking, but it was also one of the facts that drove him into you, besides your beauty, of course.
Your unique way of expressing yourself had him at your feet, even if about a 90% of the words you were saying were in your slang. Something like "Coño", "Webon", "Pana", "Alebrestao'", "Guáramo", "Beta", "Bicho", "Vaina", "Bochinche", "Chamo", "Curucutear", "Vacié", "Naguará", "Depinga", "'Toy pinta' en la pared", and a few others had him crazy and definitely looking in Google for their meaning.
And definitely the fact that you guys don't point out with your hand but rather with your lip, always had him guessing what you meant to
"Bring me that" You pucker your lips "...thing, please amor"
"Bring you what?"
"That thing" You did it again
"What thing?"
"That thing, Pablo! The vaina that's next to the bicho ese!"
"What?"
Your meeting with Gavi was pretty normal, you had met through Aurora, his sister and your best friend, your beauty instantly had him hooked and thankfully you liked him back enough to agree on a date with him. That date turned into two, three, four and eventually you became girlfriend and boyfriend.
Still, six months in and he was still left amazed by your Latina facts, doings and sayings
"Mira, mira" You had said one time "Cachicamo diciéndole a Morrocoy conchuo"
"Wait, what?" He stopped what he was doing with the biggest frown on his face making you laugh out loud "What the hell is a Cachicamo?"
He loved it tho.
Your way of being and seeing things was the second Clash of Cultures on your relationship. You look for jokes and double meaning in everything because, Venezuelan's are happy; it's in the loudness of your screams when you are happy; you don't take too seriously when someone takes your mother out because you know when people are joking around since you say that way too much to know it. You guys see the bright side of everything when it's all dark and that's something Gavi also loved from you.
Seeing as he often was the pesimist and you the optimist, he never really got too much to see you worked up or angry. So he always got surprised to see you angry and that mostly happened whenever you were driving.
"Amor-" You cut him off
"I won't even stress" You said shaking your head feeling Gavi's hand on your thigh "I'm driving like I know how to, nothing and no one can make me go ma-...¡maguevo, hijo de tú grandísima madre, cabrón!" You said honking on and on "¡Luego dicen es que nosotras las mujeres no sabemos como conducir, nojoda! ¡Viejo estúpido!" (Then you guys say it's us women who don't know how to drive, fuck! Stupid man!) You exclaimed without taking a breath
"Bebé" Gavi tried to calm you down
"Don't you see I had the green one? If I didn't stepped onto the brakes we would probably be dead! He was going like 120m/h!"
He knew better to stop and try to argue with you so he left you be and rant agreeing with you. In deed you were right.
The third Clash was definitely dancing, the thing is simple... Venezuelan's dance a lot and you guys have a lot of parties to know Salsa, Bachata, Champeta, Joropo, Tambor, Merengue, Samba and everything else to have a good time and never stop dancing; Gavi barely knew Reggaeton.
"Venga mi amor" You said lips on top of his kissing them repeatedly
"I don't know how to dance Bachata"
"That's why I am here, I'll teach you and we'll dance together!" You exclaimed happily "You don't know how sexy it is to dance Bachata with your partner"
"We can do sexy things without even having to dance!" You gave him a look
"I wanna dance, I wanna dance with you and I can't exactly dance that alone... Unless you like me being chest to chest with another man"
"Yeah, not happening" He instantly got up "How's this thing going?"
You always got him with that one
The fourth one was pretty funny, Venezuelan's take seriously holidays, you make hallacas, pernil, you dance, share the time with your family, exchange gifts, eat the twelve grapes asking for a wish each month (even tho you sometimes back in Venezuela had to do two months in one grape or something like that for the amount of personas you had at home) but the thing that stood out the most is that you guys get dressed up meanwhile, as for example, Spaniards don't.
"What are you doing dressed up like that?!" You ask Gavi surprised when he entered the bathroom with a black tee, black pants and white sneakers as yo were doing your makeup
"What are you doing dressing up like that?" He asked back
"I asked first" You replied
"This is how we always dress"
"¡Mentira!" You exclaimed laughing "¿Enserio?" He nods
"Why?"
"We do dress up a bit to welcome the new year and baby Jesus birth" You explain while laughing
"Y/N, why didn't you told me that? Our parents will be here any minute!"
"Can you let Aurora and your parents know that too?!"
"¡AMOR!"
And let's not talk about the fact your parents brought their suitcases for when the twelve chimes went in indicating the new year and started going all around your house and neighborhood walking around with them, he went all in crazy, asking you every minute "Why did they do that?"
The fifth one was your guys way of singing birthday, it was your mom's birthday and all of you got ready to sing, he looked confused at you when the song started with an: Ay, que noche tan preciosa... The addings to it like "y ruego a Dios porque pases un cumpleaños feliz, (con los pañales que te di)" confused him a lot and basically he just stood there clapping mentally making a note to learn the Venezuelan birthday song
"What's wrong?" You asked him hugging him
"We don't sing Happy Birthday like that"
"Yes, well... We like to improve some stuffs"
The sixth was the celebration of Santos and Images. This one wasn't really out of place since they also do it but he had never saw one bigger than that one and so colorful.
For example, La Divina Pastora, he has barely woken up when he heard you yell at the top of your lungs making him go out running off the bed and make his way to you: "MY GOSH SHE LOOKS SO BEAUTIFUL, I'M CRYING MY EYES OUT, MOM!" He thought something bad had happened, but when he saw you sat at the Kitchen counter laptop on with your family on facetime and your phone proped up with a live transmition of said ceremoy, he felt his soul come back to his body
"Don't do it again, please" He asked hand on his heart sitting next to you after waving at your family "Who's she and what it's about?"
Your heart melted at that, explaining to him who she was and why was she important; Pablo nodded telling you he quickly had to shower, when he came back he was wearing a Divina Pastora shirt.
Let's just say your mom had to stop you from eating your boyfriend with kisses
The seventh and last one for now, isn't that kind of clashy, it's rather a learning thing for Pablo, it was your myths and legends and food. He found himself being incredibly attracted to the stories that were mostly born on Los Llanos.
And as for the food, you had that sazón, those ideas, you were never afraid to combine pasta with fried plátanos and shredded chicken.
He loved his food but he fell in love with yours too.
He never dared to say no to some arepas, in fact he always asked for one more, the black beans you always did with fried pork was the best he ever eaten, the pabellón your mom does had him on his knees. And the desserts...? He would happily break his diet if he gets to eat for himself a whole Quesillo while eating a whole litro of Chicha de Auyama.
Now, it was your turn to be surprised when you saw and heard him picking up on some habits of yours, you didn't believe it, the guys told you he did it at trainings but you never saw it until now.
"Amor, ¿me pasas aquella vaina?" (Love, could you pass me that thing?) He said without looking up making you smile
"The what?"
"La vaina that is next to the bicho aquel" (The thing that's next to that stuff) He pointed with his lips before coming back to his work of knead arepas "Please" You laughed hard
You loved the fact he took his time to learn your culture, it meant a lot to you, just like it meant a lot to him you learning his.
"Now you're talking in Venezuelan slang? What's next? Wanting to sleep in a chinchorro?" (Hammock?) You ask in disbelief
"Well, you never know, me puedo echar mi camarón ahí" (I can take my nap there) You laughed hard once more, he washed his hands forgetting about the arepas, pulling you into him "What? I gotta keep up with my girl"
°°° °°° °°° °°°
Taglist: @gaviypedrisbride
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meitoscringe · 1 year
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Venezuela traditional clothes!!
(read below for extra information)
Here's a small simplified guide to Venezuelan traditional clothing
1- Region de los llanos: the first set of clothes (left to right) are known as the face of Venezuela but technically they originate from the "Region de los llanos".
The first 2 outfits are called liqui liqui, they're the national outfit of Venezuela and can be worn both by men and women.
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traditionally they're very simple and light colored but nowadays they come in many different forms. The other 2 dresses have no name but are known as "falda llanera" or "traje típico de joropo" and are used to dance!
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They can be any color and often have flower patterns on them.
2- Region capital: this is the region were the capital is situated. The men here wear liqui liquis or simple outfits (like the one I drew).
The women's clothing is named "Dama antoñona", there's different versions of this costume but they're all rather European looking
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Historically they used to be worn by high ranking rich women but nowadays they're more of a carnival thing
Region Zuliana: once again, the men wear rather simple looking clothes or a version of the liqui liqui. The women wear "mantas guajiras"
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Originally the manta guajira was only the Wayuu peoples's traditional wear, a native American group found in the guajira (land shared between Colombia and Venezuela), but with time the clothing started being worn by the zulians as well.
4- Region andina: this region is the coldest in Venezuela. Men wear a sort of poncho called "Ruana" the women's clothes have no name.
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The dress that I drew in the middle is sometimes used to dance, here's an example
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I've mainly seen it worn by kids tho xd
A few extra things:
-There's more regions but this 4 are the most important ones/the ones that inspired the rest. The Last 2 clothes are an example
-although I gave all the Chibis cowboy hats, we have multiple different types. Those are the most popular ones but if you need a reference for hats feel free to ask lol
-i didn't draw shoes. We do have traditional shoes but I was too tired to draw them. Once again if anyone needs a reference for them ask
-this one is kinda of a no duh, but majority of this clothes aren't worn every day and are only used for patriotism, dances or festivals.
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wosoandstuff · 2 months
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Póngase las alpargatas que lo que se viene es joropo🗣️🗣️🗣️
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kickmebare · 21 days
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The Latina urge to dance merengue, bachata, salsa, tango, joropo, y quebradita with my lover
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