Cumbia villera

Cumbia villera ([ˈkumbja βiˈʎeɾa]) (roughly translated as "slum cumbia", "ghetto cumbia", or "shantytown cumbia") is a subgenre of cumbia music originating in Argentina in the late 1990s and popularized all over Latin America and Latin communities abroad.[1]

Lyrically, cumbia villera uses the vocabulary of the marginal and lower classes, like the Argentine lunfardo and lenguaje tumbero ("gangster language" or "thug language"), and deals with themes such as the everyday life in the villas miseria (slums), poverty and misery, the use of hard drugs, promiscuity and/or prostitution, nights out at boliches (discos and clubs) that play cumbia and other tropical music genres (such as the emblematic Tropitango venue in Pacheco),[1] the football culture of the barra bravas, delinquency and clashes with the police and other forms of authority, antipathy towards politicians, and authenticity in being true villeros (inhabitants of the villas).[1][2]

Musically, cumbia villera bases its sound in a heavy use of synthesizers, sound effects, keyboard voices, keytars, electronic drums, and other elements from electric instruments. Cumbia villera's characteristic sound was created using influences from Colombian and Peruvian cumbia, cumbia sonidera and cumbia santafesina in the realm of cumbia, and from reggae, ska, Argentine folklore, and electronic music in other music genres.[1] Lastly, the creator of cumbia villera, Pablo Lescano, admitted that his lyrics were influenced by bands from Argentine punk rock, like 2 Minutos and Argentine rock rolinga, like Viejas Locas.[3][4] Over time, the genre has evolved, bands and artists have explored different sounds, and new fusions have arisen,[5] such as cumbia rapera, with Bajo Palabra mixing cumbia villera with hip hop, and tropipunk, with Kumbia Queers mixing cumbia villera with punk.

For its characteristics, cumbia villera has been compared to gangsta rap, reggaeton, rock rolinga, raggamuffin, baile funk, and narcocorrido, among other music genres.[1]

  1. ^ a b c d e ""El ritmo de la villa", Rolling Stone". Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 3 December 2017.
  2. ^ "“No me pidas que deje de robar...”", Los Andes Archived 22 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "Nunca vi una vecina tan amarga como vos", La Opinión Semanario
  4. ^ "Extrañas relaciones", La Mañana Neuquén
  5. ^ ""Conocé a Fantasma", Rolling Stone Argentina". Archived from the original on 6 October 2015. Retrieved 3 December 2017.