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Vallenato

UNESCO World Heritage Site
Traditional Vallenato music of the Greater Magdalena region
Name as inscribed on the World Heritage List
Instrumentos musicales del vallenato.svg
Caja, guacharaca, and accordion, the basic instruments in vallenato

Location Colombia
Type Intangible cultural heritage
Reference 01095
UNESCO region Latin America and the Caribbean
Inscription history
Inscription 2015 (39th Session)
Endangered since 2015

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Vallenato, along with cumbia, is a popular folk music of Colombia. It primarily comes from the Colombia's Caribbean region. Vallenato literally means "born in the valley". The valley influencing this name is located between the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta and the Serranía de Perijá in north-east Colombia. The name also applies to the people from the city where this genre originated: Valledupar (from the place named Valle de Upar – "Valley of Upar"). In 2006, Vallenato and cumbia were added as a category in the Latin Grammy Awards. Colombia’s traditional Vallenato music is Intangible Cultural Heritage in Need of Urgent Safeguarding, according to UNESCO.

This form of music originated from farmers who, keeping a tradition of Spanish minstrels (Juglares in Spanish), mixed also with the West African-inherited tradition of griots (African version of juglar), who used to travel through the region with their cattle in search of pastures or to sell them in cattle fairs. Because they traveled from town to town and the region lacked rapid communications, these farmers served as bearers of news for families living in other towns or villages. Their only form of entertainment during these trips was singing and playing guitars or indigenous flutes, known as kuisis in the Kogi language, and their form of transmitting their news was by singing their messages.


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