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Jennifer lopez on the floor video version
Jennifer lopez on the floor video version











The (all-male) American experimental trio Sun City Girls' 1990 album Torch of the Mystics included a track sneakily titled " The Shining Path," after a Peruvian terrorist organization.

#Jennifer lopez on the floor video version movie

Other versions of "Lambada" turned up elsewhere: in Japan, the hit recording was by Akemi Ishii in India, as " Sochna Kya Jo Bhi Hoga," the song appeared in the popular 1990 movie Ghayal. In the spring of 1990, there were even two simultaneously released cheapo lambada exploitation movies: Lambada and The Forbidden Dance, the latter of which prominently featured Kaoma's recording, as well as an English-language cover by Kid Creole & the Coconuts. Released in 1989 with a gigantic publicity push, "Lambada" became a huge worldwide hit. Its original writing credit was the suitably Brazilian-sounding Chico de Oliviera. Kaoma's first single was simply called "Lambada"-although it was in fact a retitled, slightly more vigorous cover of "Chorando se foi," with a cry of "dançado lambada!" thrown in at the end. He subsequently organized a band called Kaoma, which mostly consisted of ex-members of the Senegalese-French band Touré Kunda (here's an early Touré Kunda song, " Salaly Muhamed"). A French producer named Olivier Lamotte d'Incamps apparently heard "Chorando Se Foi" on a trip to Brazil in 1988, and saw a bunch of young people doing a dance they called lambada. The next year, the Brazilian pop singer Márcia Ferreira juiced up the rhythm of the Cuarteto Continental arrangement, translated Los Kjarkas' Spanish lyrics into Portugese, and recorded the song as "Chorando Se Foi." In Ferreira's version, she's still singing about crying, but you wouldn't know it from her come-hither delivery. The Peruvian group El Cuarteto Continental, covered " Llorando Se Fue" in 1985, and turned the panpipe line of Los Kjarkas' version over to an accordion. (That video linked above was made a bit later, but it's worth watching for its ridiculous karaoke-laserdisc production values.) It takes a lot to make panpipes sound cool even outside of a música folklórica context, but they pulled it off. In 1981, the Hermosa brothers's folk group Los Kjarkas recorded an insanely catchy song called " Llorando Se Fue." Its lyrics are boilerplate stuff-"the one who made me cry is crying now"-but it's got a terrific, sneaky melody, with phrases that go on longer or shorter than they seem like they're about to, and a skipped beat near the end of the chorus. You probably don't know their names, but it's a sure thing you've heard at least one of their melodies. Among the eight names listed as co-writers of Jennifer Lopez's new single "On the Floor," a couple stand out: Ulises Hermosa, who died in 1992, and his brother Gonzalo, a pair of Bolivian folk musicians who belonged to a movement called música folklórica that's pretty much what it sounds like.











Jennifer lopez on the floor video version