Текст песни Malambo No. 1 (Later Version) - Yma Sumac
Full
Review
Updated
1/6/02
to
correct
6-octave
range
to
4-to-5-octave
range.
(Though
I
know
I
read
6 somewhere!)
When
I
was
a
young
girl
many,
many
years
ago,
there
were
lots
of
names
of
people
and
concepts
and
things
I
couldn't
get
adults
to
define
or
explain
to
me.
When
mom
said,
"
Look
it
up
in
the
encyclopedia,"
and
I
couldn't
find
an
answer,
I
realized
I
had
to
wait
until
I
wasn't
dependent
on
the
adults
around
me
for
information.
Needless
to
say,
many
of
these
childish
points
of
interest
dissolved
into
mind
dust.
Yma
Sumac
was
a
name
that
settled
among
that
mind
dust,
and,
about
six
years
ago
while
perusing
the
lounge/exotica/easy
listening
section
in
a
media
superstore,
I
came
across
Yma
Sumac's
Mambo
CD.
I
think
her
name
stuck
with
me,
because
I
found
it
interesting,
and
this
CD
of
hers
looked
like
it
might
be
interesting,
so
I
purchased
it.
My
virgin
listening
of
it
bordered
on
annoyance.
I
had
expected
lively
Latin
vocals,
but
got,
instead,
lively
jungle
animal
vocals.
Sometimes
Yma
would
sing
in
a
forced
deep
voice
(what's
the
opposite
of
falsetto?)
on
up
to
a
high
C
four
or
five
octaves
away,
and
sometimes
she
was
doing
her
own
peculiar
Latin
scat,
complete
with
assorted
canine
sounds.
One
minute
she
was
Florence
Henderson
and
the
next
minute
she
was
James
Brown.
No,
James
Brown's
Doberman.
I
was
baffled
and
nearly
didn't
complete
listening
to
the
whole
CD.
Time
passed
and
I
decided
to
play
it
again.
Knowing
what
to
expect
this
time,
I
kinda
got
into
it.
On
a
third
playing,
I
was
hooked
and
was
listening
to
it
all
the
time
in
the
office
as
I
worked.
The
appeal
was
partly
the
lively
material
and
bouncy
arrangements,
but
I
have
to
admit
it
was
mostly
the
bizarreness--I
mean,
uniqueness--of
Yma's
stylings
and
her
shameless
vocal
masterbation
that
I
most
enjoyed.
From
the
web,
I
learned
that
Yma's
life
was
just
as
interesting
as
her
music.
She
had
become
the
darling
of
the
pop
music
intelligentsia
during
the
early
50s,
replete
with
a
controversial
background.
Was
she
a
bona
fide
Incan
princess
or
a
gal
named
Amy
Camus
from
Brooklyn?
Either
way,
there
was
no
denying
her
powerful
vocal
gyrations,
incredible
range,
and
exotic
look,
and
she
established
an
avant
garde
US
fan
base.
Although
I
"spread
the
word
about
Yma"
after
first
discovering
her,
I
failed
to
meet
anyone
who
had
heard
of
her.
And
then
a
couple
of
years
after
purchasing
Mambo,
I
watched
the
movie
Wigstock
and
was
pleased
to
see
a
drag
queen
lip-syncing
one
of
the
songs
from
this
CD.
After
seeing
that,
my
judgment
about
Yma
was
validated.
If
a
drag
queen
loves
Yma,
I
knew
I
was
on
to
something
really,
really
hot!

1 Chicken Talk
2 Chuncho
3 Indian Carnival
4 No Es Vida
5 Xtabay
6 Ataypura!
7 Wayra
8 Goomba Goomba
9 Jungla
10 Carnavalito Boliviano
11 Negrito Filomino
12 Lullia Mak'ta
13 Cumbe-Maita
14 Wak'ai
15 Kuyawa (Inca Love Song)
16 Inca Waltz
17 Karibe Taki
18 Witallia! (Fire In The Andes)
19 Lament
20 Kon Tiki
21 Montana
22 Zana
23 Suray Suray
24 Mamallay!
25 Panarima
26 Malambo No. 1 (Early Version)
27 Gopher
28 Goomba Boomba
29 Five Bottles Mambo
30 Cha Cha Gitano
31 Al Molina
32 Malambo No. 1 (Later Version)
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