Poll: Crisis
How much is the crisis Spain is going through affecting you?
Home | Torrevieja | TORREVIEJA TRADITION´S: LA CHARAMITA

TORREVIEJA TRADITION´S: LA CHARAMITA

Font size: Decrease font Enlarge font
image

This is a tradition in Torrevieja which passes on from parents to children. And this is one of the activities children love most when the time to honour their patron saint comes.

The “Charamita” in Torrevieja is linked to the local patron saint festivities to honour the Immaculate Conception which take place during the first days of December. It is made of a brass band and three giant figures: Lily, el Lobo (the wolf) and el Ogro (the ogre), accompanied by a group of “cabezudos” (carnival figures with an enormous head) entertained by the music of the “charamitero”, the person who plays the “dulzaina” (a small flute), the drum and very typical music from the eastern coast of Spain.

This music is somehow the “soundtrack” of the local saint festivities to honour the Immaculate Conception. Songs like the well-known “Serafina, la cochina” (Serafina the dirty one), “Los garbanzos torraos” (the toasted chickpeas) or the “Ora pro nobis”. All these songs are sung together by those children who go with the “charamita” when they go round the streets of Torrevieja, in the morning and in the afternoon, during the week of this local festivities.

This is a tradition in Torrevieja which passes on from parents to children. And this is one of the activities children love most when the time to honour their patron saint comes.

Comments (0 posted):

Post your comment comment

Please enter the code you see in the image:

  • email Email to a friend
  • print Print version
  • Plain text Plain text
advertising
Tags
No tags for this article
Rate this article
0