Jump to content

Lila Downs

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Palomo del Comalito)
Lila Downs
FILO, november 2012 - Ferrocarril Museum of Oaxaca
Background information
Birth nameAna Lila Downs Sánchez[1]
Born (1968-09-09) September 9, 1968 (age 56)
OriginTlaxiaco, Oaxaca, Mexico
GenresWorld music
Occupation(s)Entertainer
InstrumentsVoice
Years active1990–present
LabelsSony Music Latin
Websiteliladowns.com

Lila Downs (September 9, 1968 in Tlaxiaco, Oaxaca, Mexico) is a Mexican/American singer-songwriter. She performs her own compositions as well as Mexican traditional and popular music. She also incorporates indigenous Mexican influences and have recorded songs in indigenous languages such as Mixtec, Zapotec, Maya, Nahuatl and P'urhépecha.[2] Her albums are One Blood, Shake Away, and Sins and Miracles has won various Grammys and World Music Awards.

Early life

[change | change source]

Downs is the daughter of Mixtec cabaret singer Anita Sánchez and Allen Downs, a Scottish/English-American professor of art and cinematographer from Minnesota. She learned to sing at the age of four. She began to perform rancheras songs when she was 10 years old. Lila grew up partly in the Mexican state of Oaxaca, partly in the U.S. state of California as a teenager. She was 15 when she went to Performing Arts Institute of Oaxaca, where she studied music. She lived in Minnesota as an adult. She graduated from the University of Minnesota in voice and anthropology.

Downs at National Sorjuana Festival, 2007.

She later returned to Mexico where she learned to weave. Later, she began singing in the club scenes of Oaxaca and Philadelphia along with Paul Cohen, an American-born saxophonist. They began collaborating on songs that would slowly evolve into Downs' subsequent recordings. Cohen became both Downs' husband and her artistic director.[3]

In recent years, Downs and her band have toured widely in Mexico, South America, the US and Europe. She was also heard in the soundtrack to the movie Frida in a song, "Burn it Blue", that was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Song and that she performed at the 75th Academy Awards.[4] Other songs that she performed on the soundtrack are "Benediction and Dream", "Estrella Oscura", and "La Llorona". Other movies in which her songs are featured include Maria Ripoll's 2001 Tortilla Soup, Patricia Cardoso's 2002 Real Women Have Curves and Carlos Saura's 2007 Fados. She was also invited to the Twelve Girls Band's concert in Shanghai, where she sang in French and English. Downs is currently based in Coyoacán, a borough of Mexico City.

On September 2, 2008, Lila Downs released Shake Away, her latest album of new material as well as featuring a few cover songs, including "I Envy The Wind" by Lucinda Williams and "I Would Never" by The Blue Nile. Downs also collaborated with artists like La Mari from Chambao and Enrique Bunbury from Héroes del Silencio. In 2010 she appeared on The Chieftains' album San Patricio.

Sins and Miracles is the most recent album by Lila Downs. It was released in 2011. It reached the top of the charts in Mexico, Germany, Argentina, Colombia, Spain and the United States. It also reached the top ten in other major markets. Downs did a tour for the album called the "Pecados y Milagros World Tour". The singles on Sins and Miracles are: "Palomo del Comalito", "Zapata se Queda" and "Mezcalito". The album and its singles received one Grammy Award. The main music genres which make up the album are pop, folk and ska. She has a contralto vocal range.

Discography

[change | change source]

Studio albums

[change | change source]

Live albums

[change | change source]

Compilations

[change | change source]

Other albums

[change | change source]
  1. 51st Annual Grammy Awards - Arrivals. Lila Downs
  2. BBC Music: Lila Downs.
  3. XISPAS: An interview with Lila Downs Archived 2011-07-09 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved Sept 18, 2006 from xispas.com
  4. BBC News. Lila Downs, In music.

Other websites

[change | change source]