Skip to content

Two Worlds

A blog about Latin America,
from a writer in Nicaragua

  • Home
  • Latin America
  • Nicaragua
  • Honduras
  • UK housing & migration
  • About
  • Contact

Two Worlds

A blog about Latin America,
from a writer in Nicaragua

Home / Latin America / The Landfill Harmonic
Latin America

The Landfill Harmonic

John Perry January 18, 2013February 21, 2013

The Landfill Harmonic - Melodias de la Basura

In the huge rubbish dump in the barrio of Cateura, on the south side of Asunción, Paraguayan youngsters who sort through the capital’s rubbish have found the means to make music. The orchestra known locally as Melodias de la Basura or Los Reciclados, and in English as the Landfill Harmonic, was started in 2006 by an environmentalist and music teacher, Flavio Chavez. Needing instruments, he worked with a craftsman from Cateura known as Cola to make them largely from recycled material: oil tins for sound boxes, spoons for tuning pegs, forks for tensing strings. Now thirty teenagers from Cateura have guitars, flutes, violins and cellos made from rubbish. They have travelled as far as Europe to perform Mozart and Beethoven.

The landfill harmonic is part of a bigger project called Sonidos de la Tierra. Begun in 2002 by Luis Szaran, director of the Asunción Sinfonic Orchestra, it works in more than 160 poor communities in Paraguay and has taught music to over 14,000 children. They are well-known for their massive open air concerts, one of which featured 223 harps, Paraguay’s national instrument.

They play mostly classical music, but they’ve also given a concert in honour of the Rolling Stones.  The OrqueStone, formed for a concert in Asunción last August to celebrate Sonido de la Tierra’s 10th anniversary (and the Stones’ 50th), featured 2700 instrumentalists. Never before has ‘Satisfaction’ been played by so many violinists and cellists.

Original post and comments: London Review of Books

Post Tags: #Paraguay

Post navigation

Previous Previous
Barrier to success
NextContinue
Mistaken on migration

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Subscribe to the Two Worlds blog and we'll send you an email alert when we publish a new post. Please review our Privacy Policy if you have any questions or concerns.

Check your inbox now to confirm your subscription.

Categories

  • Latin America
  • Nicaragua
  • Honduras
  • UK housing & migration
  • Masaya project updates
  • Energy and the environment
  • Central America wildlife
  • Book reviews
  • Obituaries

Tags

allocations ALMOs Argentina borrowing rules budget butterflies census climate change Colombia community cohesion Costa Rica council housing Cuba drugs energy efficiency environment Green Deal homelessness Honduras housing housing benefit housing finance housing investment housing policy investment Latin writers Malvinas Masaya media Mexico migration migration policy migration statistics model cities Nicaragua Paraguay pension funds private rented sector rents right to buy tenancy reform tenant involvement transport US intervention welfare reform

Blogroll

  • Articles for Antiwar.com
  • Articles for Black Agenda Report
  • Articles for Counterpunch
  • Articles for Covert Action Magazine
  • Articles for Global Research
  • Articles for LA Progressive
  • Articles for Monthly Review online
  • Articles for NACLA
  • Articles for The Grayzone
  • Articles for The Guardian
  • Articles in People's Dispatch
  • Blogs for Council on Hemispheric Affairs
  • Blogs for Open Democracy
  • Blogs for the London Review of Books
  • Posts for Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting
  • Posts in Sheerpost
  • Two Worlds on Substack

Related websites

  • Chartered Institute of Housing
  • Council on Hemispheric Affairs
  • Housing Rights
  • Nicaragua Solidarity Coalition
  • UK Housing Review
Housing Guardian contributor
John PerryJohn Perry lives in Masaya, Nicaragua where he writes about Latin America for the Grayzone, Covert Action, FAIR, London Review of Books, Morning Star and elsewhere, and also works on UK housing and migration issues.

Copyright © 2012-2025 Two Worlds | Privacy & Cookie Policy

  • Home
  • Latin America
  • Nicaragua
  • Honduras
  • UK housing & migration
  • About
  • Contact
Search