"Sopa de Caracol" ("Snail Soup")[1] is a song performed by the Honduran
punta rock band
Banda Blanca. It was originally written by Belizean singer Hernan "Chico" Ramos and later covered by Banda Blanca, whose lyrics include verses in both
Garifuna and Spanish. The song was released by Sonotone Music in 1991 and achieved international success, peaking at number one on the
Billboard Top Latin Songs in the United States.[2][3] The track included elements of
Garifuna music and
punta, and has been used as a promotion for the
Ladino region of Honduras.[2][1]
In 2013, Puerto Rican-American singer
Elvis Crespo and Cuban-American rapper
Pitbull covered "Sopa de Caracol" and released it as a single on 30 July 2013 on Crespo's studio album One Flag.[11] Their version peaked at #41 on the Billboard Hot Latin Songs and #1 on the Tropical Songs charts.[12]
^
ab
Zuchore-Walske, Christine (2010).
"Music and Dance". Honduras in Pictures. Lerner Publishing Group, Inc: 54.
ISBN9781575059600. Retrieved 15 January 2011.
^
abc
Recasens Barbara, Albert (31 August 2010).
"El Baile de las Caderas, el Impacto de la Punta en las Otredades". A Tres Bandas: Mestizaje, Sincretismo e Hibridación en el Espacio Sonoro Iberomericano. Sociedad Estatal para la Acción Cultural Exterior: 146. Retrieved 15 January 2011.
"Sopa de Caracol" ("Snail Soup")[1] is a song performed by the Honduran
punta rock band
Banda Blanca. It was originally written by Belizean singer Hernan "Chico" Ramos and later covered by Banda Blanca, whose lyrics include verses in both
Garifuna and Spanish. The song was released by Sonotone Music in 1991 and achieved international success, peaking at number one on the
Billboard Top Latin Songs in the United States.[2][3] The track included elements of
Garifuna music and
punta, and has been used as a promotion for the
Ladino region of Honduras.[2][1]
In 2013, Puerto Rican-American singer
Elvis Crespo and Cuban-American rapper
Pitbull covered "Sopa de Caracol" and released it as a single on 30 July 2013 on Crespo's studio album One Flag.[11] Their version peaked at #41 on the Billboard Hot Latin Songs and #1 on the Tropical Songs charts.[12]
^
ab
Zuchore-Walske, Christine (2010).
"Music and Dance". Honduras in Pictures. Lerner Publishing Group, Inc: 54.
ISBN9781575059600. Retrieved 15 January 2011.
^
abc
Recasens Barbara, Albert (31 August 2010).
"El Baile de las Caderas, el Impacto de la Punta en las Otredades". A Tres Bandas: Mestizaje, Sincretismo e Hibridación en el Espacio Sonoro Iberomericano. Sociedad Estatal para la Acción Cultural Exterior: 146. Retrieved 15 January 2011.