AMP Concerts offers innovative and inspiring arts programming throughout New Mexico. A portion of all AMP ticket sales goes to fund free community concerts, workshops, school programs & artist residencies.
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Upcoming

El Gozao & Los 33

June 12th

Buckethead

June 17th

Andy Mason

June 20th

Andy Mason

June 20th

Both Sides Now

June 28th

Yeison Landero

July 5th

Elida Almeida

July 11th

Menla Choga Puja

July 14th

Mac Heartbreakers

July 17th

Rufus Wainwright

July 17th

Mary Gauthier

July 19th

Menla Choga Puja

July 22nd

Ron Crowder

August 28th

Yungchen Lhamo

September 11th

The Wailers

September 11th

Yungchen Lhamo

September 12th

Día de los Muertos

October 3rd

Coco Montoya

October 8th

Coco Montoya

October 9th

Coco Montoya

October 10th

Chris Duarte

October 23rd

Chris Duarte

October 24th

Joanne Shaw Taylor

October 28th

Arkansauce

December 4th

Aly & AJ (New Date!)

December 16th

Kalos

January 27th

Kalos

January 28th

Yeison Landero

at JUNO Brewery
1501 1st St NW
Albuquerque NM 87102
Other Events at Juno Brewery

Time: 7:30pm     Day: Sunday     Doors: 6:30pm     Ages: All Ages     Price: $20

Tickets cost $22 in advance, $27 day of show (including service charges). They are also available by phone through Hold My Ticket at 505-886-1251.

Join us for the best traditional Colombian cumbia around. He set Civic Plaza on fire last year at ¡Globalquerque! and will be the perfect finale for the holiday weekend. The show will be outside on Juno's back patio.

Yeison Landero, from San Jacinto in Colombia’s Montes de María province near Cartagena, is called “el heredero de la cumbia”—the heir to cumbia. Not only is he from the birthplace of the tradition, but he is also the grandson of Andrés Landero, affectionately known as “el rey de la cumbia” (the king of cumbia).

Colombian cumbia as it’s known today was popularized in the 1960s by Yeison’s grandfather, Andrés Landero, affectionately known as “el rey de la cumbia” (“the king of cumbia”). He was a prolific songwriter, often writing about his love for Colombia, its people, and culture, creating an expansive repertoire of cumbia hits that are now considered classics. Andrés translated the indigenous melodies of San Jacinto’s gaitas (a native flute made of a hollowed-out cactus stem) to the accordion; combined them with propulsive African-derived rhythms played on a trio of percussion instruments, including the tambora and llamador; added electric bass to fill out the bottom; and wrote and sang lyrics that championed the lives of rural indigenous and Black campesinos, who are thought to have brought the foundations of cumbia to the region centuries earlier.

Yeison Landero grew up in an environment rich with music, dances, and serenades. He began studying with his grandfather at just 7 years old, inheriting not just Andrés’s love of cumbia and the accordion, but also his talent to interpret melodies. Yeison quickly became the most appreciated student of his grandfather, learning all the emotions and humility behind the musician. In his early years, Yeison’s home was a frequent stop by musicians entertaining at parties with their incomparable talents. Alfredo Gutiérrez, Lizandro Meza, Enríquez Díaz, Adolfo Pacheco Anillo, the legendary pipers of San Jacinto, and Abel Antonio Villa are all renowned musicians with whom Yeison nurtured his traditional style.

Yeison started playing in groups with his grandfather and sister, performing cumbia at festivals, celebrations, concerts, regional fairs, and touring nationally. He later went on to study music at Palacio de Bellas Artes, and got his law degree at the University of Cartagena. His love for his ancestral accordion and his passion for cumbia were so great that he returned to performing full time, captivating the hearts of cumbiamberos along the way. Yeison released his first album, Landero Vive, as a tribute to his grandfather's immortal legacy. Since then, he has not stopped playing, representing Colombian cumbia’s unique sound nationally and internationally. Today Yeison Landero and his band are keeping classic cumbia alive, updating it for 21st century listeners and dancers, and bringing it to the world through their performances and recordings.


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