José Capmany
José Capmany was a Costa Rican songwriter and guitarist. Along with Enrique Ramírez, he was a founder of the band "Café con Leche", a popular rock band in Costa Rica in the late 1980s. His latest release "Canciones Cotidianas" included a compilation of his work. Songs like "El Barco", "La Historia Salvaje" (which contains a sample of Gloria from Them but with more hard rock and in the lyrics the complete lyric from the popular kid song "Los Pollitos" combined with the chorus). "La Modelo" and "Mamá y Papá" are considered folk rock music in Costa Rica. He died in a car accident on October 13th, 2001.[1]
Capmany is widely recognized as the most important rock musician and a cornerstone in Costa Rican rock development.[2] Many musicians have said they found him a source of inspiration, and most of his songs have been sung by other people as a form of tribute.
Sony Music edited a last album with Capmany's music after his death. "Volando alto/La historia salvaje" is a double disc, one with his old hits and other with unreleased songs that were completed by his bandmates.
External links
- HELP / Hormigas en la pared "Capmany represented what is original and authentic, the pioneer... the Father of National Rock"
- 20 Years of National Rock
- Jose Capmany's Discography available for Digital Download
- Cafe con Leche's Discography available for Digital Download
References
- ↑ La Nación. "10 años de ausencia... y el legado vive" (in Spanish). Retrieved 2011-10-14.
- ↑