Yma Súmac was born in Callao, El Callao, Peru. Other dates mentioned in her various biographies range from 1921 to 1929. Some sources claim that she was not born in Ichocán, but in a nearby village or possibly in Lima, and that her family owned a ranch in Ichocán where she spent most of her early life. Stories published in the 1950s claimed that she was an Incan princess directly descended from Atahualpa. A story claiming that she was actually born Amy Camus (Yma Sumac backwards) in Brooklyn or Canada was fabricated while she was performing in New York City in the early 1950s. She adopted the stage name of Imma Sumack (also spelled Ymma Sumack and Ima Sumack) in South America before she went to the U.S. The stage name was based on her mother's name which was derived from Ima Shumaq, Quechua for "how beautiful!" although in interviews she claimed it meant "beautiful flower" or "beautiful girl".
Imma Sumack first appeared on radio in 1942, and married composer and bandleader Moisés Vivanco on June 6 the same year. She recorded at least 23 tracks of Peruvian folk songs in Argentina in 1943 . These early recordings for the Odeon label featured Moisés Vivanco's group, Compañía Peruana de Arte, a group of 46 Indian dancers singers and musicians. In 1946, Sumack and Vivanco moved to New York City, where they performed as the Inca Taky Trio: Sumack herself singing coloratura soprano, Vivanco on guitar and her cousin Cholita Rivero singing contralto and dancing. Sumack bore a son, Charles, in 1949, and was signed by Capitol Records in 1950, at which time her stage name became "Yma Sumac".
During the 1950s, Yma Sumac produced a series of legendary lounge music recordings featuring Hollywood-style versions of Incan and South American folk songs, working with the likes of Les Baxter and Billy May. In 1951, she popularized Jorge Bravo de Rueda's classic song Vírgenes del Sol. The combination of her extraordinary voice, exotic looks and stage personality made her a hit with American audiences. Sumac even appeared in a Broadway musical, Flahooley, in 1951, as a foreign princess who brings Aladdin's lamp to an American toy factory to have it repaired. The show's score was by Sammy Fain and E.Y. "Yip" Harburg, but Sumac's four numbers were the work of Vivanco. Capitol Records, Sumac's label, recorded the show. Flahooley closed quickly but the recording continues as a cult classic, in part because it also marked the Broadway debut of Barbara Cook. During the height of Sumac's popularity, she appeared in the films Secret of the Incas (1954) and Omar Khayyam (1957). She became a U.S. citizen July 22, 1955
In 1957, Sumac and Vivanco divorced, their dispute making news in Los Angeles.[10] They remarried that same year before divorcing again in 1965. Apparently due to financial difficulties, Yma Sumac and the original Inca Taky Trio went on a world tour in 1961, which lasted for five years. They performed in 40 cities in the Soviet Union, and afterwards all over Europe, Asia and Latin America. Their performance in Bucharest, Romania was recorded as the album Recital, her only 'live in concert' record. Yma Sumac spent the rest of the 1960s performing sporadically.
In 1971, she released a rock album, called Miracles, and returned to live in Peru. She performed in concert from time to time during the 1970s in Peru and later in New York. In the 1980s, she had a number of concerts both in the U.S. and abroad . She sang Ataypura during a March 19, 1987 appearance on Late Night with David Letterman, appearing alongside actor-comedians Jerry Seinfeld and Bill Murray.
In 1989, she sang once again at The Ballroom in New York. In March 1990, she played the role of Heidi in Stephen Sondheim's Follies, in Long Beach, California, her first attempt at serious theater since Flahooley in 1951. In 1992, Günther Czernetsky directed a documentary titled Yma Sumac - Hollywoods Inkaprinzessin (Yma Sumac - Hollywood's Inca princess). She also gave several concerts in the summer of 1996 two more in Montreal, Canada in July 1997 as part of the Montreal International Jazz Festival.
Sumac's profile rose again when the song Ataypura was featured in the Coen Brothers' film The Big Lebowski. Her song Bo Mambo appeared in a commercial for Kahlua liquor, and was sampled for the Hands Upsong by the Black Eyed Peas. The song Gopher Mambo was used in the films Ordinary Decent Criminal and Confessions of a Dangerous Mind. The songs Goomba Boomba and Malambo No. 1 appeared in Death to Smoochy.
On May 6, 2006, Sumac flew to Lima, where she was presented the Orden del Sol award by Peruvian President Alejandro Toledo, and the Jorge Basadre medal by the Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos.
Yma Sumac recorded an incredible vocal range of more than four octaves, from B2 to C♯7 (approximately 123 to 2270 Hz). She was able to sing notes in the low baritone register as well as notes above the range of an ordinary coloratura soprano. Both low and high extremes can be heard in the song Chuncho (The Forest Creatures) (1950)
Yma Sumac passed away at an assisted living facility in Los Angeles, California on November 1, 2008.
==Discography==
*At least eighteen tracks of Peruvian folk songs in Argentina in 1943 for the [[Odeon Records]] label, with Moisés Vivanco's group, Compañía Peruana de Arte—a group of forty-six Indian dancers, singers, and musicians. (Three additional tracks from these sessions are instrumentals or feature other vocalists.)(10" 78 rpm)
* ''Voice of the Xtabay'' (1950), Capitol Records 10" LP H244 (33 1/3) CD-244 (78 rpm set)
* ''Flahooley'' (1951), Capitol DF-284 (78 rpm set)
* ''Legend of the Sun Virgin'' (1952), Capitol DDN-299 (78 rpm set)
* ''Inca Taqui'' (1953), Capitol L-243 (10" LP)
* ''Mambo!'' (1954), Capitol T-564 (10" LP)
* ''Voice of the Xtabay & Inca Taqui'', (1955) Capitol W-684 (both on one 12" LP)
* ''Legend of the Jivaro'' (1957), Capitol T-770 (12" LP)
* ''Fuego Del Ande'' (1959), Capitol T-1169 (Monophonic); ST 1169 (Stereo) (mono and stereo versions were separate recordings) (12" LP)
* ''Recital'' (1961), Electrecord EDE-073 (12" LP) — reissued on CD, ESP-DISK' 4029 (2006)
* ''Miracles'' (1971), London XPS 608 (12" LP) — reissued with two additional tracks as ''Yma Rocks!'' (1998), ShamLys JOM-1027-2 (CD)
* ''I Wonder'' on [[Stay Awake (album)|Stay Awake: Various Interpretations of Music from Vintage Disney Films]], 1988 (one of Various Artists)
* ''Mambo ConFusion'' (1991), Deutsche Schallplatten Berlin (Germany CD Maxi-Single), DSB 3025-5 (CD Maxi-Single contains 'Radio Version,' longer 'Maxi Version,' and 'Mambo Hip' version)
Babalu
Yma Sumac Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
Que le hacemos a Babalú
Dame diecisiete velas
Pa pornelas en cruz
Dame un cabo de tabaco, mañiengue
Y un jarrrito de aguardiente
Dame um poco de dinero, mañiengue
Pa que me de la surte
Que me nego me quiera
Ai, negro
Que le tenga dinero
Y que no se muera
Yo le quero pedir, a Babalú
Un negrito muy santo
Como tu
Que no tenga otra nega
Y que no se muera
The lyrics to Yma Sumac's song Babalu tell the story of a funeral procession for Babalu, a deity or spirit in the Afro-Caribbean religion of Santeria. The singer asks for seventeen candles to be placed in a cross for the ritual, and also requests tobacco, aguardiente (a type of alcohol), and money for good luck. The singer then asks Babalu for a favor: to find someone who will love them and have money, and to not die. The singer also asks for a "negrito muy santo," or a holy black man who has no other women and who will not die.
The lyrics are an example of the syncretism of Santeria, which combines elements of African religions brought over by enslaved Africans with Catholicism. Babalu is a syncretic deity who is often associated with Saint Lazarus in Catholicism. The song also reflects the struggles of Afro-Cubans for economic and social parity. The singer's requests for love and money reflect the harsh realities of poverty and limited opportunities for many Afro-Cubans.
Line by Line Meaning
Está empezando el velorio
The funeral is beginning
Que le hacemos a Babalú
What are we going to do for Babalú?
Dame diecisiete velas
Give me seventeen candles
Pa pornelas en cruz
To place them in a cross
Dame un cabo de tabaco, mañiengue
Give me a tobacco stick, my friend
Y un jarrrito de aguardiente
And a little jug of aguardiente
Dame um poco de dinero, mañiengue
Give me a little bit of money, my friend
Pa que me de la surte
So that luck will come my way
Yo le quero pedir
I want to ask
Que me nego me quiera
That my man loves me
Ai, negro
Oh, my black man
Que le tenga dinero
To have money
Y que no se muera
And not to die
Yo le quero pedir, a Babalú
I want to ask Babalú
Un negrito muy santo
For a very holy black man
Como tu
Like you
Que no tenga otra nega
Who doesn't have another woman
Y que no se muera
And not to die
Contributed by Michael H. Suggest a correction in the comments below.
@sadvs2
Está empezando la velorio
Ay que le hacemo' a Babalú
Ay tráeme 17 velas, pa' ponerla' en cru'
Y dame un poco de tabaco mañiengue
y un poquito de aguardiente
y dame un poco de dinero mañiengue
pa' que me de la suerte
Yo quiero pedir, que mi negro me quiera
que tenga dinero y que no se muera
Ay le quiero pedir a Babalú un negrito muy gordo como tú
Que tenga dinero y que no se muera
Translation:
The wake is starting
Oh what do we do to Babalú
oh, bring me seventeen candles, to put them on cross
And give me some tobacco, mañiengue
and some schnapps
and give me some money, maniengue
so that he gives me luck
I want to ask, that my "negro" (negro = black guy) love me
that he has money and that he does not die
Oh, I want to ask to Babalú for a very fat black guy like you
That he has money and that he does not die
@antonellaantonelli1987
È la prima volta che l'ascolto..me ne parlava mio padre, diceva che la chiamavano l'usignolo delle Ande..verissimo..che voce..fantastica
@hardyangulo193
Seguidores de Ima Sumac ❤
@isabelabarlletti151
irrepetible ser humano !!! Grande Yma Sumac
@user-jv5hk2jy4p
Обожаю эту певицу! Что она творит голосом!
@MrMaxonian206
My late mother loved her singing in the 1950s
@miguelybarra6100
YMA SUMAC. THE PRINCESS INCA . THE BEST. SINGER. OF THE WORLD.
@sadvs2
The best singer ever
@levisalvini4110
@@sadvs2
Hands down my friend...
@jungleman2625
La amo. Es mi novia platónica y mi abuela al mismo tiempo. Saludos desde el Perú.
@merymandujano8429
💜💜🎼💜 MARAVILLAS!!YMA SUMAC y MOSIÉS VIVANCO ETERNOS!! MÚSICA PARA EL MUNDO!!💜🎼💜💜