Beautifully sung thank you for uploading - do you happen to know who the soloist is? I'm very puzzled you've given the name as "La Virgen Lava Pañales" and the first verse in this video is this "La Virgen lava pañales
y los tiende en el romero;
los pajaritos cantaban
y el agua se iba riendo." but thereafter the lyrics and the melody aren't what I expected. Instead they seem to be from that lovely old Spanish carol "Brincan y Bailan". Is there a version where the two vilancicos are combined?
@Suila2007 Thank you but that was not in fact my question :-). My question was why has it been described as "La Virgen Lava Pañales" when it is in fact a complete different melody and text from - the first verse is indeed "La Virgen Lava Pañales" the rest of the track is from the well-known Castillian villancico "Brinca y Bailan".
Superb ! une merveille
merci !
Les Loupiots
titussenlair 1 week ago
ces voix si pures, c 'est une telle merveille...
vaindieu 3 weeks ago
Gracias por el detalle españolista. Felices fiestas. Suenan muy dulces
escolaniasds 2 months ago
Thanks a lot for sharing!
Suila2007 2 months ago
Beautifully sung thank you for uploading - do you happen to know who the soloist is? I'm very puzzled you've given the name as "La Virgen Lava Pañales" and the first verse in this video is this "La Virgen lava pañales
y los tiende en el romero;
los pajaritos cantaban
y el agua se iba riendo." but thereafter the lyrics and the melody aren't what I expected. Instead they seem to be from that lovely old Spanish carol "Brincan y Bailan". Is there a version where the two vilancicos are combined?
markfromireland 2 months ago
@markfromireland
It is from the LP "Chantent Noel" released 1977. Can be found on BCSD and bought at Amazon.fr as CD rereleased 1996.
Suila2007 2 months ago
@Suila2007 Thank you but that was not in fact my question :-). My question was why has it been described as "La Virgen Lava Pañales" when it is in fact a complete different melody and text from - the first verse is indeed "La Virgen Lava Pañales" the rest of the track is from the well-known Castillian villancico "Brinca y Bailan".
markfromireland 2 months ago