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GUEST ARTISTS Los Llaneros (yah-NEH-ros) brings to the stage the often energetic and sometimes haunting melodies of the Colombian/Venezuelan Llanos or plains that surround the vast basin of the Orinoco River in South America. The Llanos (YAH-nos) is a geographically and culturally unique and little known area of Latin America, and its music evolved from the contact between nomadic Indians and Jesuit settlers starting about five hundred years ago. Llaneros music is cowboy music of the Colombian/Venezuelan "vaqueros" or cowboys (the English term "buckeroo" comes from the Spanish word "vaquero"). Due to the distinctly characteristic syncopations and difficult harp and cuatro techniques, Llanero music is rarely performed in its authentic style outside of the region, and hence it remains one of Latin America’s best kept secrets. The ensemble was founded in 1978 in Latin America but moved its base of operation to the USA in 1996. Founding member Karin Stein (Colombian) still serves as the ensemble's main vocalist and ensemble leader. Edgar East (Panamanian) joined the ensemble in 1997, and Daniel Rojas (Colombian) in 2003. MUSICIANS Edgar East was born and raised Panama City, Panama, and began performing at a very young age. Besides being a member of Los Llaneros, Latin duo Calle Sur, and directing the nationally based Afro-Latin Project, Ed performs Latin jazz, salsa, vocal jazz, and world music, as a soloist or with other ensembles. Ed has a degree in music education and taught band for eighteen years before becoming a touring musician. Instruments: Vocals, maracas, Latin percussion, bass, flute, quena, gaita, caña de millo Daniel Rojas from Colombia, affectionately known as "Dany Harp," is one of the young and rising stars of Llanero harp music. Aside from being a versatile virtuoso, Daniel has launched the Harp And Folklore Foundation, an important U.S.-based initiative aimed at enhancing the public's understanding and appreciation for Latin folk music, in particular the harp music of Venezuela, Colombia, and Mexico. Instruments: Harp, cuatro, vocals, maracas, tiple, guitar, percussion Karin Stein is a Colombian musician and composer native to the Llanos. Her clear and powerful voice has earned her praise from many sources, and her compositions have won prizes and been featured in a variety of movies and documentaries. In addition to being the ensemble's lead vocalist and director, she performs with Iowa-based Latin duo Calle Sur together with Ed East. Instruments: Lead vocals, cuatro, guitar, tiple, quena, gaita, caña de millo, small percussion instruments LOS LLANOS "Los Llanos" (los YAH-nos), meaning "The Plains," is the savanna region which encompasses the vast watershed of the Orinoco River. It unites eastern Colombia with the central third of Venezuela. This expansive and beautiful land is characterized by ample, open grasslands, and slow-flowing rivers and creeks flanked by gallery forests. The human population density in the Llanos has always been low, primarily because of its poor soils. The Precolumbian Indian tribes of the Llanos, which were descendants of Caribbean cultures, led a nomadic life and subsisted by hunting, gathering, and horticulture. Jesuit missionaries arrived in the Llanos beginning in the Sixteenth Century, followed by large-scale landowners and their cattle herds. Since then, the life of the Llaneros or people of the Llanos has been closely tied to cattle ranching. Even today, cattle ranching is an important way of life in the Llanos, threatened in some areas by encroaching, large-scale agriculture and oil extraction. Over the centuries, Spanish influences were adapted and transformed, and from this process emerged a distinct Llanero culture with very similar characteristics on both sides of the border between Colombia and Venezuela. Music continues to play a central role in the daily lives of Llaneros, and its central themes continue to be cattle ranching, nature, and love. Los Llanos has seen a most interesting cultural blending which is reflected in every note and syncopation. In terms of the European settlement that first brought cattle, horses, and the cowboy lifestyle to South America and Mexico in the early Sixteenth Century, the history of the Llanos region is similar to that of the better known "Pampas" or plains of Argentina and Brazil, though the music is distinctly different.