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LaLupe-QueenOfLatinSoulH264-AAC-2007[h33t.com]

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Category : Series » Misc
Added : 7 weeks ago
Size : 455.82 MB
Seeds : 0
Peers : 0
Hash : 8c0c920b30062cfbca3c02b21103c01c7442b424
Tags : LaLupe QueenOfLatinSoulH264 2007




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Torrent description

MOVIE INFO



Title................................: La Lupe: Queen of Latin Soul

Release Date.........................: 2 March 2007

Genre................................: Documentary

Country..............................: USA

Language.............................: English & Spanish

Subtitles............................: English (hard coded)



Video Format.........................: MPEG/H264

Source...............................: Television Broadcast

Aspect Ratio.........................: 16:9

Runtime..............................: 0:53:30

Resolution...........................: 720X400 (uncropped)

Frame Rate...........................: 29.97 fps

Video Bitrate........................: 1164 kbits/s

Audio Format.........................: AAC 2-channel Stereo

Audio Bitrate........................: 48KHz/192 kbps

File Size............................: 455.7MB



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LA LUPE: QUEEN OF LATIN SOUL (2007)

Ela Troyano, Filmaker/Director - [i]NDEPENDENTLENS (PBS)



A rebel and innovator, pop singer Lupe Yoli, otherwise known as La Lupe or La Yiyiyi, was renowned for her emotional performance style. Her renditions of classics such as “My Way,” “Fever” and “Going Out of My Head” were famous worldwide. But the legendary Cuban-born star was also a single mother of two, a survivor of domestic abuse and a Santera who later became an evangelist Christian speaker. LA LUPE QUEEN OF LATIN SOUL tells La Lupe’s story through character-driven interviews in first-person anecdotes, in an oral history much like those found in a folk ballad or a bolero.



Born in Cuba in 1936, La Lupe first hit La Habana’s music scene in the 1950s. Her older sister Norma Yoli describes her as “just another black girl from Santiago,” one who loved to imitate the singers she heard on the radio. One of these was Olga Guillot, who at the time was Cuba’s reigning bolero singer. As the Cuban Revolution dawned, La Lupe, like many artists at the time, left Cuba, claiming, “There was no room in Cuba for me and the revolution.” She emerged in New York City in the 1960s and 1970s as the Queen of Latin Soul, performing alongside peers such as Mongo Santamaria, Tito Puente and Celia Cruz.



Shot in New York City, Miami, La Habana and Puerto Rico, LA LUPE evokes two groundbreaking cultural periods through interviews and rare archival footage: pre-Revolutionary 1950s La Habana and the burgeoning Latin music scene in New York City in the 1960s and 1970s. The film begins with La Lupe’s funeral in 1992—attended by fans, family and the whole of New York’s Latino music aristocracy—and follows her from poverty to celebrity and back again.