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18:25, 29 May 2014: Quentin418 (talk | contribs) triggered filter 132, performing the action "edit" on Sukay. Actions taken: Warn; Filter description: Removal of all categories (examine)

Changes made in edit

{{unreferenced|date=December 2012}}
'''Sukay''', which means 'to open the earth and prepare it for planting', is an internationally touring musical group that has performed for over three decades the music of the Andean regions of [[Peru]], [[Ecuador]] and [[Bolivia]].


Sukay was formed by Edmond Badoux from Switzerland and Quentin Howard in Montreal, Quebec in 1974. In 1975 they traveled to South America for 15 months where they studied Andean music in many small villages in Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia. Upon returning from the trip they began to tour the United States and set up their home base in [[San Francisco]], [[California|CA]]. They were joined by two Bolivian musicians, [[Gonzalo Vargas (composer)|Gonzalo Vargas]] and [[Javier Canelas]], to make Sukay a powerful influence in the United States for indigenous Andean music.


SUKAY, an internationally touring musical group, is known in the US, more than any other group, for bringing the music of the Andes for the first time to thousands of cities and concert stages throughout North America. The group’s name came from the ancient language and culture of the Quechua of the central Andes, and it means “to open the earth and make it ready for planting.”
Sukay is directed by the legendary Bolivian composer Eddy Navia, who is considered to be one of the greatest Bolivian [[Charango|charangist]] in the world.
For 25 years before the opening of Peña Pachamama in San Francisco in the late ninties, Sukay performed major concerts in Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center’s Avery Fisher Hall, Jack Singer Concert Hall, Obert C. Tanner Ampitheatre in Utah, the Herbst Theatre and Masonic
Auditorium San Francisco, Wilder Hall at Oberlin, Red Rocks Ampitheatre in Colorado, the Lisner Auditorium and Smithsonian Institution’s Baird Auditorium in Washington DC, Teatro Campesino, Cal Arts Valencia, the Roy Disney Center for Performing Arts in Albuquerque, the Scottsdale Center for the Arts in Arizona, Centennial Hall in Tuscon, Spivey Hall in Ohio, and the Colisee Arena in Quebec City (opening for Peter Gabriel and Genesis). The group also appeared at mega festivals in Vancouver, Calgary, and Winnipeg, and at Pete Seeger’s Clearwater Revival and countless other venues. They toured internationally and recorded many albums. Among the Andean legends joining them were Yuri Ortuño “the
Placido Domingo of Bolivia”, Savia Andina’s renown wind instrumentalist Alcides Mejia, and Eddy Navia, one of Bolivia’s beloved charangists. Eddy went on to become Sukay’s artistic director and husband of Sukay's co-founder Quentin Howard Navia.
In the mid-‘70s, Eddy had Eric Clapton status in his native country. The music of his band stayed atop the South America Top 40 charts,
and several of their 35 album recordings on CBS and RCA went gold.
Sukay was formed by Edmond Badoux from Switzerland and Quentin Howard in Montreal, Quebec in 1975. They traveled to South America for 15 months where they studied Andean music in many small villages in Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia. Setting up Sukay's home base in San Francisco, California, they invited two Bolivian musicians, Gonzalo Vargas and Javier Canelas to join them. In 1989, the legendary Bolivian composer Eddy Navia took over as Artistic Director of the group. In 2012 and 2013 he was nominated for the prestigious Latin Grammy and is considered to be one of the greatest Bolivian composers and charango virtuosos in the world today.


==Discography==
Discography
* ''[[The Rough Guide to the Music of the Andes]]'' (1996, [[World Music Network]])


Sukay Instrumental (suk03)
== External links ==
Cumbre (The Summit) (suk07)

Return of the Inca (suk09)
* [{{Allmusic|class=artist|id=p3446/biography|pure_url=yes}} All Music]
Savia Andina Classics (suk12)
* [http://www.mindspring.com/~sukay/ www.mindspring.com entry for Eddy Sukay]
Savia Andina Classics 2 (suk14)

Savia Andina Classics 3 (suk30)
[[Category:Andean music]]
Navidad Andina (Christmas) (suk16)

Encuentros (Meetings) (suk20)
{{Bolivia-stub}}
Love Songs of the Andes (suk24)
{{band-stub}}
Andean Guitar Instrumental (suk26)
Pachamama La Llamada, The Call (suk28)
Andean Pan Pipes (suk32)
Eddy Navia En Charango (en01)
Eddy Navia Mozart En Machu Picchu (en02)
Eddy Navia World Instrumentals
Piano Charango Chuchito Valdés & Eddy Navia
nominated for a Latin Grammy 2013
Carnaval en Piano Charango
Chuchito Valdés & Eddy Navia
nominated for a Latin Grammy 2014
available on CD Baby, iTunes, Amazon
www.penapachamama.com
Resources:
''The Rough Guide to the Music of the Andes'' (1996) World Music Network
Books: Peña Pachamama, The Art of Raw Living (2013)

Action parameters

VariableValue
Edit count of the user (user_editcount)
0
Name of the user account (user_name)
'Quentin418'
Age of the user account (user_age)
1829
Groups (including implicit) the user is in (user_groups)
[ 0 => '*', 1 => 'user' ]
Whether or not a user is editing through the mobile interface (user_mobile)
false
Page ID (page_id)
7267467
Page namespace (page_namespace)
0
Page title without namespace (page_title)
'Sukay'
Full page title (page_prefixedtitle)
'Sukay'
Last ten users to contribute to the page (page_recent_contributors)
[ 0 => 'PhnomPencil', 1 => 'Addbot', 2 => 'RJFJR', 3 => '99.170.151.34', 4 => '67.188.111.6', 5 => 'CactusBot', 6 => '80.140.244.50', 7 => '71.106.93.206', 8 => 'Softy', 9 => 'Auntof6' ]
Action (action)
'edit'
Edit summary/reason (summary)
''
Whether or not the edit is marked as minor (no longer in use) (minor_edit)
false
Old page wikitext, before the edit (old_wikitext)
'{{unreferenced|date=December 2012}} '''Sukay''', which means 'to open the earth and prepare it for planting', is an internationally touring musical group that has performed for over three decades the music of the Andean regions of [[Peru]], [[Ecuador]] and [[Bolivia]]. Sukay was formed by Edmond Badoux from Switzerland and Quentin Howard in Montreal, Quebec in 1974. In 1975 they traveled to South America for 15 months where they studied Andean music in many small villages in Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia. Upon returning from the trip they began to tour the United States and set up their home base in [[San Francisco]], [[California|CA]]. They were joined by two Bolivian musicians, [[Gonzalo Vargas (composer)|Gonzalo Vargas]] and [[Javier Canelas]], to make Sukay a powerful influence in the United States for indigenous Andean music. Sukay is directed by the legendary Bolivian composer Eddy Navia, who is considered to be one of the greatest Bolivian [[Charango|charangist]] in the world. ==Discography== * ''[[The Rough Guide to the Music of the Andes]]'' (1996, [[World Music Network]]) == External links == * [{{Allmusic|class=artist|id=p3446/biography|pure_url=yes}} All Music] * [http://www.mindspring.com/~sukay/ www.mindspring.com entry for Eddy Sukay] [[Category:Andean music]] {{Bolivia-stub}} {{band-stub}}'
New page wikitext, after the edit (new_wikitext)
' SUKAY, an internationally touring musical group, is known in the US, more than any other group, for bringing the music of the Andes for the first time to thousands of cities and concert stages throughout North America. The group’s name came from the ancient language and culture of the Quechua of the central Andes, and it means “to open the earth and make it ready for planting.” For 25 years before the opening of Peña Pachamama in San Francisco in the late ninties, Sukay performed major concerts in Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center’s Avery Fisher Hall, Jack Singer Concert Hall, Obert C. Tanner Ampitheatre in Utah, the Herbst Theatre and Masonic Auditorium San Francisco, Wilder Hall at Oberlin, Red Rocks Ampitheatre in Colorado, the Lisner Auditorium and Smithsonian Institution’s Baird Auditorium in Washington DC, Teatro Campesino, Cal Arts Valencia, the Roy Disney Center for Performing Arts in Albuquerque, the Scottsdale Center for the Arts in Arizona, Centennial Hall in Tuscon, Spivey Hall in Ohio, and the Colisee Arena in Quebec City (opening for Peter Gabriel and Genesis). The group also appeared at mega festivals in Vancouver, Calgary, and Winnipeg, and at Pete Seeger’s Clearwater Revival and countless other venues. They toured internationally and recorded many albums. Among the Andean legends joining them were Yuri Ortuño “the Placido Domingo of Bolivia”, Savia Andina’s renown wind instrumentalist Alcides Mejia, and Eddy Navia, one of Bolivia’s beloved charangists. Eddy went on to become Sukay’s artistic director and husband of Sukay's co-founder Quentin Howard Navia. In the mid-‘70s, Eddy had Eric Clapton status in his native country. The music of his band stayed atop the South America Top 40 charts, and several of their 35 album recordings on CBS and RCA went gold. Sukay was formed by Edmond Badoux from Switzerland and Quentin Howard in Montreal, Quebec in 1975. They traveled to South America for 15 months where they studied Andean music in many small villages in Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia. Setting up Sukay's home base in San Francisco, California, they invited two Bolivian musicians, Gonzalo Vargas and Javier Canelas to join them. In 1989, the legendary Bolivian composer Eddy Navia took over as Artistic Director of the group. In 2012 and 2013 he was nominated for the prestigious Latin Grammy and is considered to be one of the greatest Bolivian composers and charango virtuosos in the world today. Discography Sukay Instrumental (suk03) Cumbre (The Summit) (suk07) Return of the Inca (suk09) Savia Andina Classics (suk12) Savia Andina Classics 2 (suk14) Savia Andina Classics 3 (suk30) Navidad Andina (Christmas) (suk16) Encuentros (Meetings) (suk20) Love Songs of the Andes (suk24) Andean Guitar Instrumental (suk26) Pachamama La Llamada, The Call (suk28) Andean Pan Pipes (suk32) Eddy Navia En Charango (en01) Eddy Navia Mozart En Machu Picchu (en02) Eddy Navia World Instrumentals Piano Charango Chuchito Valdés & Eddy Navia nominated for a Latin Grammy 2013 Carnaval en Piano Charango Chuchito Valdés & Eddy Navia nominated for a Latin Grammy 2014 available on CD Baby, iTunes, Amazon www.penapachamama.com Resources: ''The Rough Guide to the Music of the Andes'' (1996) World Music Network Books: Peña Pachamama, The Art of Raw Living (2013)'
Unified diff of changes made by edit (edit_diff)
'@@ -1,19 +1,38 @@ -{{unreferenced|date=December 2012}} -'''Sukay''', which means 'to open the earth and prepare it for planting', is an internationally touring musical group that has performed for over three decades the music of the Andean regions of [[Peru]], [[Ecuador]] and [[Bolivia]]. -Sukay was formed by Edmond Badoux from Switzerland and Quentin Howard in Montreal, Quebec in 1974. In 1975 they traveled to South America for 15 months where they studied Andean music in many small villages in Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia. Upon returning from the trip they began to tour the United States and set up their home base in [[San Francisco]], [[California|CA]]. They were joined by two Bolivian musicians, [[Gonzalo Vargas (composer)|Gonzalo Vargas]] and [[Javier Canelas]], to make Sukay a powerful influence in the United States for indigenous Andean music. -Sukay is directed by the legendary Bolivian composer Eddy Navia, who is considered to be one of the greatest Bolivian [[Charango|charangist]] in the world. - -==Discography== -* ''[[The Rough Guide to the Music of the Andes]]'' (1996, [[World Music Network]]) - -== External links == - -* [{{Allmusic|class=artist|id=p3446/biography|pure_url=yes}} All Music] -* [http://www.mindspring.com/~sukay/ www.mindspring.com entry for Eddy Sukay] - -[[Category:Andean music]] - -{{Bolivia-stub}} -{{band-stub}} +SUKAY, an internationally touring musical group, is known in the US, more than any other group, for bringing the music of the Andes for the first time to thousands of cities and concert stages throughout North America. The group’s name came from the ancient language and culture of the Quechua of the central Andes, and it means “to open the earth and make it ready for planting.” +For 25 years before the opening of Peña Pachamama in San Francisco in the late ninties, Sukay performed major concerts in Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center’s Avery Fisher Hall, Jack Singer Concert Hall, Obert C. Tanner Ampitheatre in Utah, the Herbst Theatre and Masonic +Auditorium San Francisco, Wilder Hall at Oberlin, Red Rocks Ampitheatre in Colorado, the Lisner Auditorium and Smithsonian Institution’s Baird Auditorium in Washington DC, Teatro Campesino, Cal Arts Valencia, the Roy Disney Center for Performing Arts in Albuquerque, the Scottsdale Center for the Arts in Arizona, Centennial Hall in Tuscon, Spivey Hall in Ohio, and the Colisee Arena in Quebec City (opening for Peter Gabriel and Genesis). The group also appeared at mega festivals in Vancouver, Calgary, and Winnipeg, and at Pete Seeger’s Clearwater Revival and countless other venues. They toured internationally and recorded many albums. Among the Andean legends joining them were Yuri Ortuño “the +Placido Domingo of Bolivia”, Savia Andina’s renown wind instrumentalist Alcides Mejia, and Eddy Navia, one of Bolivia’s beloved charangists. Eddy went on to become Sukay’s artistic director and husband of Sukay's co-founder Quentin Howard Navia. +In the mid-‘70s, Eddy had Eric Clapton status in his native country. The music of his band stayed atop the South America Top 40 charts, +and several of their 35 album recordings on CBS and RCA went gold. +Sukay was formed by Edmond Badoux from Switzerland and Quentin Howard in Montreal, Quebec in 1975. They traveled to South America for 15 months where they studied Andean music in many small villages in Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia. Setting up Sukay's home base in San Francisco, California, they invited two Bolivian musicians, Gonzalo Vargas and Javier Canelas to join them. In 1989, the legendary Bolivian composer Eddy Navia took over as Artistic Director of the group. In 2012 and 2013 he was nominated for the prestigious Latin Grammy and is considered to be one of the greatest Bolivian composers and charango virtuosos in the world today. + +Discography + +Sukay Instrumental (suk03) +Cumbre (The Summit) (suk07) +Return of the Inca (suk09) +Savia Andina Classics (suk12) +Savia Andina Classics 2 (suk14) +Savia Andina Classics 3 (suk30) +Navidad Andina (Christmas) (suk16) +Encuentros (Meetings) (suk20) +Love Songs of the Andes (suk24) +Andean Guitar Instrumental (suk26) +Pachamama La Llamada, The Call (suk28) +Andean Pan Pipes (suk32) +Eddy Navia En Charango (en01) +Eddy Navia Mozart En Machu Picchu (en02) +Eddy Navia World Instrumentals +Piano Charango Chuchito Valdés & Eddy Navia +nominated for a Latin Grammy 2013 +Carnaval en Piano Charango +Chuchito Valdés & Eddy Navia +nominated for a Latin Grammy 2014 +available on CD Baby, iTunes, Amazon +www.penapachamama.com + +Resources: + ''The Rough Guide to the Music of the Andes'' (1996) World Music Network +Books: Peña Pachamama, The Art of Raw Living (2013) '
New page size (new_size)
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Old page size (old_size)
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Size change in edit (edit_delta)
1998
Lines added in edit (added_lines)
[ 0 => 'SUKAY, an internationally touring musical group, is known in the US, more than any other group, for bringing the music of the Andes for the first time to thousands of cities and concert stages throughout North America. The group’s name came from the ancient language and culture of the Quechua of the central Andes, and it means “to open the earth and make it ready for planting.”', 1 => 'For 25 years before the opening of Peña Pachamama in San Francisco in the late ninties, Sukay performed major concerts in Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center’s Avery Fisher Hall, Jack Singer Concert Hall, Obert C. Tanner Ampitheatre in Utah, the Herbst Theatre and Masonic', 2 => 'Auditorium San Francisco, Wilder Hall at Oberlin, Red Rocks Ampitheatre in Colorado, the Lisner Auditorium and Smithsonian Institution’s Baird Auditorium in Washington DC, Teatro Campesino, Cal Arts Valencia, the Roy Disney Center for Performing Arts in Albuquerque, the Scottsdale Center for the Arts in Arizona, Centennial Hall in Tuscon, Spivey Hall in Ohio, and the Colisee Arena in Quebec City (opening for Peter Gabriel and Genesis). The group also appeared at mega festivals in Vancouver, Calgary, and Winnipeg, and at Pete Seeger’s Clearwater Revival and countless other venues. They toured internationally and recorded many albums. Among the Andean legends joining them were Yuri Ortuño “the', 3 => 'Placido Domingo of Bolivia”, Savia Andina’s renown wind instrumentalist Alcides Mejia, and Eddy Navia, one of Bolivia’s beloved charangists. Eddy went on to become Sukay’s artistic director and husband of Sukay's co-founder Quentin Howard Navia.', 4 => 'In the mid-‘70s, Eddy had Eric Clapton status in his native country. The music of his band stayed atop the South America Top 40 charts,', 5 => 'and several of their 35 album recordings on CBS and RCA went gold. ', 6 => 'Sukay was formed by Edmond Badoux from Switzerland and Quentin Howard in Montreal, Quebec in 1975. They traveled to South America for 15 months where they studied Andean music in many small villages in Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia. Setting up Sukay's home base in San Francisco, California, they invited two Bolivian musicians, Gonzalo Vargas and Javier Canelas to join them. In 1989, the legendary Bolivian composer Eddy Navia took over as Artistic Director of the group. In 2012 and 2013 he was nominated for the prestigious Latin Grammy and is considered to be one of the greatest Bolivian composers and charango virtuosos in the world today. ', 7 => false, 8 => 'Discography', 9 => false, 10 => 'Sukay Instrumental (suk03)', 11 => 'Cumbre (The Summit) (suk07)', 12 => 'Return of the Inca (suk09)', 13 => 'Savia Andina Classics (suk12)', 14 => 'Savia Andina Classics 2 (suk14)', 15 => 'Savia Andina Classics 3 (suk30)', 16 => 'Navidad Andina (Christmas) (suk16)', 17 => 'Encuentros (Meetings) (suk20)', 18 => 'Love Songs of the Andes (suk24)', 19 => 'Andean Guitar Instrumental (suk26)', 20 => 'Pachamama La Llamada, The Call (suk28)', 21 => 'Andean Pan Pipes (suk32)', 22 => 'Eddy Navia En Charango (en01)', 23 => 'Eddy Navia Mozart En Machu Picchu (en02)', 24 => 'Eddy Navia World Instrumentals', 25 => 'Piano Charango Chuchito Valdés & Eddy Navia', 26 => 'nominated for a Latin Grammy 2013', 27 => 'Carnaval en Piano Charango', 28 => 'Chuchito Valdés & Eddy Navia', 29 => 'nominated for a Latin Grammy 2014', 30 => 'available on CD Baby, iTunes, Amazon', 31 => 'www.penapachamama.com', 32 => ' ', 33 => 'Resources:', 34 => ' ''The Rough Guide to the Music of the Andes'' (1996) World Music Network', 35 => 'Books: Peña Pachamama, The Art of Raw Living (2013)' ]
Lines removed in edit (removed_lines)
[ 0 => '{{unreferenced|date=December 2012}}', 1 => ''''Sukay''', which means 'to open the earth and prepare it for planting', is an internationally touring musical group that has performed for over three decades the music of the Andean regions of [[Peru]], [[Ecuador]] and [[Bolivia]]. ', 2 => 'Sukay was formed by Edmond Badoux from Switzerland and Quentin Howard in Montreal, Quebec in 1974. In 1975 they traveled to South America for 15 months where they studied Andean music in many small villages in Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia. Upon returning from the trip they began to tour the United States and set up their home base in [[San Francisco]], [[California|CA]]. They were joined by two Bolivian musicians, [[Gonzalo Vargas (composer)|Gonzalo Vargas]] and [[Javier Canelas]], to make Sukay a powerful influence in the United States for indigenous Andean music.', 3 => 'Sukay is directed by the legendary Bolivian composer Eddy Navia, who is considered to be one of the greatest Bolivian [[Charango|charangist]] in the world. ', 4 => false, 5 => '==Discography==', 6 => '* ''[[The Rough Guide to the Music of the Andes]]'' (1996, [[World Music Network]])', 7 => false, 8 => '== External links ==', 9 => false, 10 => '* [{{Allmusic|class=artist|id=p3446/biography|pure_url=yes}} All Music]', 11 => '* [http://www.mindspring.com/~sukay/ www.mindspring.com entry for Eddy Sukay]', 12 => false, 13 => '[[Category:Andean music]]', 14 => false, 15 => '{{Bolivia-stub}}', 16 => '{{band-stub}}' ]
Whether or not the change was made through a Tor exit node (tor_exit_node)
0
Unix timestamp of change (timestamp)
1401387914