

They so nailed it.įorty six years later, BOOM!-another band explodes on the scene rocking the gaita asturiana again. Electric guitars, mustaches, and a gaita asturiana. If there is a Spanish word for “groovy”, these guys are it. I couldn’t stop smiling through the whole video. I came across it a few months ago and it blew me away.

I think the gaita gods were somehow guiding them because not only did they create this epic gaita song but they also did a music video. Núñez’s subsequent albums have continued to generate considerable sales and much respect and admiration, and his latest masterpiece Discover, released in 2012, has been highly acclaimed and propelled his status as a musician and artist into that of a global ambassador.Ĭontinuing to enjoy a successful and active performing career, Núñez is currently touring worldwide, fortifying his stature as Galicia’s most valued musical export.In 1967 the biggest pop band from Asturias, Spain- Los Archiduques-rocked the gaita asturiana (bagpipe from Asturias, Spain) in their song “Lamento de Gaitas”. He featured more than 50 guest artistes from Galicia, Spain and further a field on this first release and, in Spain it became the first Celtic traditional recording to achieve the coveted platinum status. In 1996, Carlos’ much-anticipated debut album, A Irmandade das Estrelas (Brotherhood of Stars), finally fulfilled his musical mission of inter-Celtic alliance beautifully. It was a memorable US concert debut by him, and since then he has toured and recorded several times with the Chieftains, including on five of their albums. The celebrated Irish traditional band, The Chieftains, whom Carlos had initially met at Lorient’s Inter-Celtic Festival, fortified this musical brotherhood when in 1994 they invited him to perform at New York City’s Carnegie Hall. Since then, that feeling of brotherhood has been a true mission for me.” There, performers from seven Celtic countries put their traditional music together to form ‘one nation’ beyond languages and frontiers. “Finally I got an answer when, at twelve years of age, I was invited to play with the Inter-Celtic Festival of Lorient Orchestra in Brittany, France’s northwest region known for its own tradition of Celtic music. “I had asked myself that question since I was a kid in Vigo,” he admits. What does that title mean to Carlos Núñez? He takes that important responsibility very seriously and continues to work for the greater good of the music and its tradition with great modesty rather than pursuing any selfish personal goals. Having single-handedly brought the stirring, gutsy music of Galicia to the international stage to much acclaim and celebration, Carlos Núñez has become Galicia’s foremost traditional music ambassador. His concerts are electrifying and exhilarating, and Carlos plays his arsenal of instruments, including the recorder, the ocarina, assorted whistles, Scottish highland pipes, uilleann pipes, bombarde, biniou koz and pastoral pipes, with all the flamboyance and drama of a rock star! The Los Angeles Times published “If it’s possible to become a pop star playing traditional music on bagpipes and recorder, Núñez could be the man,” – and this could even be an understatement for one sees few pop stars nowadays taking to the stage with such panache, passion, fervour and enthusiasm.

Acutely aware that traditional music can so quickly become complacent and static without innovation, he strives to make music that is current, dynamic and exciting, whilst still retaining all of its original charm and carefully respecting Galicia’s musical legacy. He is an embodiment of the spirit and soul of the ancestral music of Galicia and has become an international icon through his successful endeavours to introduce the world to the native music of his homeland.Ĭarlos is a performer in a class of his own, continuously pushing boundaries to create fresh, fascinating music that can keep up with the times in this fast paced, modern world. Núñezwas born in 1971 and raised in the Galician port of Vigo, where he first began to play the gaita at only eight years of age. Carlos Núñez is the world’s most famous player of the gaita, the bagpipes of Galicia and its richly vibrant, uniquely expressive sounds of Celtic traditional music.
