Víctor Jara (album)

Víctor Jara is the second solo album by Chilean singer-songwriter Víctor Jara, released in 1967. It continues the nueva canción (new song) style of politically conscious folk music that he had established with his first solo namesake album, in 1966. The songs of Víctor Jara change from Jara's earlier autobiographical lyrics to topics of general concern for all of Latin America,[1] growing closer to the style of Violeta Parra. Parra died shortly before the album was released, and Jara, her student and friend, stepped forward to fill the political void.[2][3] After this album, Jara's subsequent work would become more explicitly political, espousing left-wing activism to advocate or protest specific political issues.[1]

Víctor Jara
Studio album by
Released1967
GenreNueva canción, folk music
Length41:13
Label
ProducerVíctor Jara
Víctor Jara chronology
Víctor Jara
(1966)
Víctor Jara
(1967)
Canciones folklóricas de América
(1967)

The album includes the controversial song, "El aparecido" (The Ghost), which was written about Che Guevara months before the Argentinian revolutionary was killed. The song says, "The crows with golden claws have put a price on his head / how the fury of the rich has crucified him."[3]

Background

In 1966, Víctor Jara met the group Quilapayun (formed for Eduardo Carrasco, Julio Carrasco, Carlos Quezada, Willy Oddó and Patricio Castillo), and they started a "musical society" that lasts several years and that would result in the recording of some albums, including it, and Canciones folklóricas de América.[4][5] The album also had the musical support of the orchestra of Sergio Ortega and the artistic direction by Rubén Nouzeilles.[5]

Release

Víctor Jara was released in 1967 on Odeon Records label. The album was reissued under various alternative titles such as Mensaje, Desde Lonquen hasta siempre and El verso es una paloma. "El aparecido" was released as single with "Solo" as b-side in March of that year only in Chile.[6]

Track listing

  1. "El aparecido" (The Ghost) (Víctor Jara)
  2. "El lazo" (The Lasso) (Víctor Jara)
  3. "Qué alegres son las obreras" (How Happy Are the Women Workers) (Bolivian folk)
  4. "Despedimiento del angelito" (Farewell to the Little Angel) (Chilean folk)
  5. "Solo" (Alone) (Eduardo Carrasco)
  6. "En algún lugar del puerto" (Some Place in the Port)(Víctor Jara)
  7. "Así como hoy matan negros" (Thus They Kill Blacks Today) (Pablo Neruda - Sergio Ortega)
  8. "El amor es un camino que de repente aparece" (Love Is a Road that Suddenly Appears) (Víctor Jara)
  9. "Casi, casi" (Almost, Almost) (Chilean folk)
  10. "Canción de cuna para un niño vago" (Lullaby for a Deserted Child) (Víctor Jara)
  11. "Romance del enamorado y la muerte" (Song of the Lover and of Death) (Text: Anonymous – Víctor Jara)
  12. "Ay mi palomita" (Ah, My Little Dove) (Chilean folk)

References

  1. Mularski, Jedrek (2014). Music, Politics, and Nationalism In Latin America: Chile During the Cold War Era. Cambria Press. p. 94. ISBN 9781621967378.
  2. Lockard, Craig A. (2020). Societies, Networks, and Transitions, Volume II: Since 1450: A Global History (4 ed.). Cengage Learning. p. 810. ISBN 9780357639283.
  3. Barr-Melej, Patrick (2017). Psychedelic Chile: Youth, Counterculture, and Politics on the Road to Socialism and Dictatorship. UNC Press. p. 97. ISBN 9781469632582.
  4. "Víctor Jara + Quilapayún: Canciones folklóricas de América (1968)". PERRERAC (in Spanish). 8 December 2018. Retrieved 12 July 2021.
  5. Rodríguez, jorge (21 December 2014). "Víctor Jara: Víctor Jara (Odeon) (1967)". PERRERAC (in Spanish). Retrieved 10 October 2022.
  6. "Victor Jara Discography: Víctor Jara (1967)". Nuevacancion.net. Archived from the original on 24 February 2012. Retrieved 10 October 2022.
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