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Urubamba

Urubamba (possibly from Quechua for "spider's plain") may refer to:

In places:

  • Urubamba, Peru, a small town in Peru, near the Urubamba River
  • Urubamba Province, a province of the Cusco Region, southern Peru
  • Urubamba River, a river in Peru
  • Urubamba Valley, a valley in Peru, below the sacred city of Machu Picchu
  • Urubamba, another name for mount Veronica in Peru
  • Urubamba mountain range, a mountain range in Peru

In music:

  • Urubamba (band), a South-American music group that recorded with Paul Simon
Urubamba (band)

Urubamba is a music group consisting of musicians from Argentina and Uruguay, founded in 1956 by Jorge Milchberg. Urubamba, known in Europe as Los Incas, introduced Paul Simon to Andean music in the mid-1960s, and then toured and recorded with Simon (" El Condor Pasa").

Urubamba was formed by the Argentines Jorge Milchberg on charango, Uña Ramos and Jorge Cumbo on the quena flute, and the Uruguayan Emilio Arteaga playing guitar and bombo. Juan Dalera replaced Uña Ramos for their second world tour with Simon.

Milchberg's style stayed close to the folklore of the altiplanos (highlands) of Peru, Argentina, Bolivia, Ecuador and Chile, but two albums, Un Pedazo del Infinito and Urubamba are remarkable due to their esoteric, almost meditative moods. Milchberg's later recordings, on the French Buda label, feature him as a soloist on charango ("Charango") or in the grouping that reverted to the original name of Los Incas ("Los Incas en Concert" and "El Ultimo") with his son, Olivier Milchberg, accompanied by cello, guitar, pan pipes ( zampoñas), and drum ( bombo). On "El Ultimo"—recorded forty-six years after the group's founding—the personnel consisted of Jorge and Olivier Milchberg with Lupe Vega (voice), Juan Dalera (flute), Moises Arnaiz (guitar), Jorge Trasante (percussion), and Rob Yaffe (cello).