 For Colibri, which means hummingbird, Colibri is a beautiful bird all over the world and we bring music for children and we're going to show you this morning some of the instruments that are played in Latin America and Alisa is going to explain you the next song that is called Altambor. This song comes from Panama originally and we use it to introduce our instruments to you. It goes like this. This is the chorus. Altambor, Altambor, Altambor de la derrilla, yo quiero que tu me... English is called guitar and if you put the word you have the Spanish name, it's called guitarra. Guitar, guitarra, amigamia, yo quiero que tu... Other Andean countries is called... So it's another instrument from the Andes and they're made from goat's toenails. And the word for toenails and fingernails in Spanish is uñas and that's the name of this instrument. Las uñas, las uñas, las uñas, amigas mías, yo quiero que tu me lleves alta. English the word is pan pipes and Spanish we use the word sampoña. So let's sing for the sampoñas. Sampoña, amigamia, from Argentina, school out of Argentina there is a common area that is called the Andes and from the Andes comes the Andean music that maybe many people around the Bay Area knows. We're going to play a diana that is a call in the morning and you play with these two instruments or is one instrument split in two that are called sampoñas? Some way... There are two ways to play sampoñas. One is the way I played earlier where one person plays both parts together. The other way which is more traditional is that two people play one song together, one melody. And that's what we're going to do now. If you watch, sometimes litchi will be blowing into the pipes, sometimes I will. We have to do it together. This comes from the Afro-Venezuelan tradition and there's three parts we're going to do. The first part is about a girl named Juana who is so good at dancing. Her friends can't believe it. And they always call her... The second part is about a frog, kind of funny, frog dancing out in the banana field. I don't know. But this song Frogs Dance and people dance and kids dance and so in the last part we sing about everybody dancing and singing together and the name of the music and the rhythm is Gidi Mare, it's also the name of the song. And so she needs to take other people's clothes to wash them in order to make some money. And where she lives there are no washing machines so she takes her clothes and she goes out to the river and looks for a rock to scrub the clothes against. And that's what she does all day except lucky for her. She has a friend and in the middle of the day the friend comes and sings to her and brings her flowers and it makes her work day a little bit easier but then she has to get back to work. It's called La La Venderita. And the sound, we like to do this in the song, the sound that we think maybe she makes while she's scrubbing the clothes against the rocks and you guys here if you want you can help us goes. She grew up in Chile, Cusanos which means the worms and we're going to sing it in Spanish but what it means is how wonderful it is to live underneath the earth. We don't see the sun or the moon or their stars, uh oh ah ah, the dampness is so delicious. Uh oh ah ah, long live darkness. The rooster sings early in the morning but we get up whenever we feel like it. And we'll all dance together holding hands, centipedes, roly-polybugs, caterpillars and worms. Okay, well we're going to ask the people that are here to clap along with us and the part that we want to teach you sounds like this. Oops. Why don't you take the chair? La Lomida. La Escudida. A very small instrument that has ten strings because it's such a small instrument that needs a lot of strings to sound loud and it really does sound loud. We're going to sing a song that talks about friendship. Invites people to sing along with a song.