About Me
PALIMAY nuevo disco! / 2009 · independiente
Gran disco de buenas canciones, bien cantadas, tocadas y tratadas, que con la fuerte esencia de su autor abre un universo amplio desde un pequeño punto de partida. Ibarra crea asà un eslabón original como trasmisor de un mensaje positivo, desde su vida pausada y con las músicas de la triple frontera, que se comparte y disfruta siempre.
seleccionado como Disco Del Mes de Octubre 2009 por el ClubdelDisco.com
COLLAGE DE RÃO / 2007 · independiente (ÚLTIMAS UNIDADES!)
Los ocho temas que componen Collage de RÃo tienen un concepto claro y simple, pero la estrella del disco son las canciones que remiten a la imagen del rÃo, que empieza y termina con el siempre cambiante y dulce sonido del agua. El disco toma elementos localistas o regionales y logra combinarlos en una producción moderna, lo que lo acerca estéticamente a cantautores como Jorge Drexler, MartÃn Buscaglia o Lisandro Aristimuño. Su sonido es acústico e Ãntimo, combinado con una electrónica sutil. Frescura que los rÃos traen desde Chaco. Canción litoraleña, pop acústico, folk actual.
Foto: palomaunave.com
fotos de la última fecha en CLUB ATLÉTICO LITORAL
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New Folk. Natural Songs
You haven’t heard of Chamamé, music popular in Chaco and Corrientes? You haven’t heard of Chaco, a state in the north part of Argentina? No problem. Let Seba Ibarra, independent singer/songwriter introduce you to Chamamé. Like the Jamaican musician Earl "Chinna" Smith, Seba plays music that's instantly engaging and homegrown. His chamamé/pop/fusion doesn't conform to any genre. It's a timeless music of celebration, a celebration of local traditions, local rivers and this part of the Earth and its fish, buses, plants, animals and people...
Collage de rÃo (River collage), Seba's first album, is lovely like a river. Each track flows into the next, with beautiful harmonies, creative instrumentation, and fun, occasionally profound, and always image-laden lyrics.
For his new album Palimay, released in November 2009, you don’t have to speak Spanish to dance and memorize the lyrics. And maybe you’ve never drank the famous Argentine yerba mate, but you’ll be thirsty after Seba introduces you to tereré, a cold, summer version of the sacred drink. You don’t have to understand Spanish to feel the happy confusion of Si mal no me equivoco, the dark bravery of Palimay, the refreshing joy of Tereré.
The instrumentation includes acustic guitar, bass, piano, drum kit, accordion, cajón peruano (a wooden box with a thin top that generates deep, dynamic sounds), bombo legüero (traditional Argentine percussion), moceño (a bamboo flute from the Andes), and a gallon water jug.
You can come in through the door of Seba’s music: explore Chaco, dance to your first cajón peruano rhythm, take a mental bus trip, and swim in the sound....