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Morropón Province

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The Morropón Province is one of eight provinces of the Piura Region in Peru . The province was created in 1936. Its administrative center is in the town of Chulucanas .

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17-620: The province is divided into ten districts, which are: The territory of the province is divided into two by the Piura River. It has many medicinal lagoons that are located on the Cerro Negro, 6 kilometres (4 mi) from the Chalaco District, also close to the village of Inapampa, which contains a natural viewpoint. On the other side is located the famous dance of tondero , which originates from colonial days and that gives

34-401: A lack of varied hilly valleys. Its climate is dry-tropical in lower areas. In the winter the temperatures range from 17 °C and 27 °C. The summers are more humid and receive strong temperatures that can exceed 38 °C in the months of January, February, and March. In the high valleys located at an elevation between 1,500-2,000 m the temperatures and the weather is more humid and tropical and

51-493: A resemblance to the order of those trumpet gypsy bands found in Romania or Hungary whom after tragic intro, flow as nomadic tunes. So we have a caravan-like feeling, where rhythms of cajón resemble as if they were mules, donkeys or even horses from a caravan. The thumping noise is accompanied by the "Tundete of the guitarr" that sounds like Ton-Ton-Tun. That is why it probably changed into Tondero instead of Volero (Bolero); there

68-480: The "Peruvian cajon" (now used in Latin American commercial rhythms), modern flamenco and evolutionary jazz , and/or Peruvian spoon players. It may be accompanied by palms or an Afro-Peruvian instrument made of dried and flattened pumpkins called checo . It is also played by trumpet and drum bands. It is composed of three parts: 1) glosa 2) dulce and 3) fuga . In its choreography and its music,

85-461: The Spanish. The criollo mango of the dry-tropical is also a large export. 5°05′51″S 80°09′44″W  /  5.097523°S 80.162104°W  / -5.097523; -80.162104 Tondero Tondero is a dance and guitar rhythm from Peru that developed in the country's northern coastal region ( Piura – Lambayeque ). The Tondero is a Peruvian dance and rhythm born in

102-620: The dances seem to have guitarra and cajón instruments as their principal instruments. Figures of course represent cockfights and the stumps, body-waist movements and hand movements are done in gypsy musical style where flirting is done by the women, and the stud acts, and picaresque attitude called machismo , is done by the man. Tondero is played by all coastal regions of the North; so there are styles from La Libertad, Lambayeque, Piura (the official region and origin of Tondero) and even Tumbes. The " chinganas " (traditional creole music bars) has

119-428: The gypsy errant and caravanistic life) yet it eventually evolved into a "T", as to describe the tundete sound and base rhythm typical to it: "Bum Bum Bum". This base rhythm derives from trumpeting Csárdás yet carefully scales on guitar and the dance handfigures and movements are primitive bulerías . The cock fight so popular among Gypsies worldwide is where the dance gets its choreography and inspiration. However, as

136-403: The loss of cattle, crops (due usually to El Niño phenomena) or the lament due to unrequited love from his "china" (dear woman). The use of the handkerchief , as a symbolic element that relates to the flying of errant birds, has a possible Romani inheritance that belongs to the weddings and is also seen in coastal dances like Zamacueca Limeña, Resbalosa, Canto de Jarana or Marinera Norteña. All of

153-538: The north coast adjacent to the eastern valleys of the Sierra or "yungas" of Piura , Sechura and Lambayeque . The oldest version is from the Morropón Province , approximately the center of Piura's region, below the highlands and inland from the coast. The classical version consists of a principal singer, a small chorus , two Criollo style guitar players (one picking up the tundete or tondero bass line);

170-494: The popular costume of putting a "White Flags" as synonymous invitations for newcomers or solitary bohemian northmen "Piajenos" (how northern people call the typical farmers whom ride donkeys and mules) to come refresh themselves from the northern heat and have a "Chicha de Jora" drink. It is of course a great chance to listen to an old "Piajeno" farmer sing and play tondero rhythms, most typically of northern Lambayeque and southern Piura. The cumananas and "Tristes" are somewhat like

187-485: The province of Morropon the recognition of being "The Capital of Tondero". This province is located in the center of the Piura Region , being a land of contrast and climatic fusion. It is dotted by tropical forests of the dry-equatorial style in its flat areas were the carob tree predominates. In high areas of an elevation 1,500 to 2,000 metres (4,900–6,600 ft) the landscape changes to smooth high jungle and

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204-473: The resemblance to the yaraví (Andean song) mestizo in the guitar, gypsy Romani ballads of eastern Europe or Spain in the form of song and then the explosive finish line or "tundete" of guitar: the rhythm of Tondero itself. The most probable is that the term tondero derives from the term volero (flyer, birds that fly) or bolero and after years of changes to Tondero (with a t) as faster version based on Zards and Flamenco. The musical composition of guitarra has

221-625: The same emotion: the errant life of birds , cockfighting very common among Peruvians (Peruvian roosters are the largest and most aggressive) and lastly, the falling in love ; between birds or between the macho stallion that battles to get the acceptance of the female, she flirts and doesn't let him conquer her until the end. The prototype image of tondero and cumanana singers are the solitary mestizo or creole (northern Peruvian) farmers who stop and sing about their tragic hard life, their errant ways. Themes are usually tragic and somewhat picaresque, where one makes fun of one's tragedy. Typical topics are

238-459: The style of high jungle but they maintain less than the summer. The part of the Canchaque mountain range and district of Yamango are temperate and they stay around the 23-24 °C all year although it can lower to 15 °C at nights. Morropon is known for its extraordinary lemons which may be very well the most juicy in the world; there is located the lemon trees of South America brought by

255-496: The tondero is very similar to the marinera, Perú's national dance, and the marinera norteña, the version of the marinera popular in the northern part of Perú—roughly the area around Trujillo and Piura. All of these dances ultimately stem from what had been cultivated in Perú by Spanish horsemen of Romani origin, then modified by African slaves. The terminology of "Tondero" derives from the terms Volandero, and Volero ( to fly by , describes

272-541: The tragic initial Zards or the Cante Jondo of Andalucia but in a mestizo flavour. After a few drinks of Pisco , Algarrobina or Chicha en poto come the "Cumanánas"; whom are coplas brought in "contra punto" style. They are sung in satiric and picaresque style but rooted always in a sad theme. The cumananas all surround the Tondero. Right before a tondero it is common to play cumanana and tristes. You can hear

289-523: The years went on, the significance of African influence added to its Romani origin and so did the mingling of these with the native Amerindians. Unlike the Zamacueca , which directly derives from Zambrainas and Hispano-African influences without Andean addings, the Tondero maintains a stronger Romani origin in its tragic lyrics with visible addings of African and America, Indian influence as time went by. The dance expresses three themes, all inspired from

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