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<strong>Vida en el Valle</strong></p>
music
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<strong>Univision News</strong></p>
<p>Latino immigrants and their descendants have long struggled to define their identity. Like any community, economic and cultural hardships sometimes make them feel isolated and different.</p>
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<strong>Frontera NorteSur </strong></p>
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<p>(KPRENSA) – Músico de Cypress Hill y Bestie Boys, Eric Bobo, junto a Latin Bitman presentan “Ritmo Machine”.</p>
<p> Esta nueva sociedad musical que une al destacado productor y DJ de la escena local, Latin Bitman junto a uno de los músicos de grandes agrupaciones como Cypress Hill y Beastie Boys: Eric Bobo nació tras la participación de ambos en la primera versión del festival Lollapalloza Chile.</p>
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<p> There isn’t one person reading this who hasn’t seen or heard of the Grammys. You know, the TV show that comes on every February that gives out those gold trophies that are replicas of a vintage gramophone record player in miniature. Getting nominated for one changes one’s career.</p>
Music doesn’t define a people…but a people that define music
By Frankie Firme
Chicano music…means a lot of different things to a lot of different people.
To generic “Hispanics” (in particular, those 40 to 60-year-olds who used to be Chicanos, LOL), they figure, “OK…I’ve heard a little El Chicano, Tierra, Malo, Los Lobos, and Santana…I’m grown up now…so what’s the big deal?”