With a sapucay strong enough to reach Malvinas, the show “El gran baile de Zamba y Niña” was presented live at the Microestadio de Tecnópolis, where hundreds of girls and boys danced and sang to the rhythm of the most iconic songs of the series. of the public signal.
With a special free show to commemorate the Day of the Veteran, Veteran and the Fallen in the Falklands War, which brought together more than 500 people, the girls and boys enjoyed a musical proposal with the emblematic characters of Pakapaka.
“After two years of the pandemic, it is one of the first shows that we come to see and we take advantage of the opportunity on such a special and moving day for all Argentines,” Cecilia Kowalski, who brought her daughter and niece, said in line at the micro-stadium. 5 and 6 years old.
“With Zamba, the story was learned again to be able to tell it to them in a more entertaining and educational way,” added the woman.
After 3:30 p.m., the animations of Zamba and Nina appeared projected on a giant screen to start the show led by Magalí Sánchez Alleno and Emiliano Larrea, and included the participation of the live Zamba band made up of Facundo Tapia, Gonzalo Dimuro, Melina Moguilevsky and Camila Yorio.
With a tour of different genres from chamamé to cumbia through rock, the hosts of the show asked the boys to get up from their seats and dance.
When the march of San Lorenzo sounded, the girls and boys approached the stage marching and jumping, while they sang the lyrics.
Then it was the turn to do a “Sapucay that can be heard even in the Malvinas” and the public danced to the rhythm of the chamamé.
Another moment of great enthusiasm was when the band played the rock version of the salute to the flag and the stadium was filled with applause.
The show continued with songs that pay homage to fundamental figures in Argentine history such as San Martín, Juana Azurduy, or Manuel Belgrano with the rap “Belgrano no para”.
After the show, 8-year-old Ailén came out of the micro-stadium dancing and said that she “liked” the show a lot and her favorite character is Zamba.
Meanwhile, his mother Maira assured that this April 2 is “a very important date for them to learn and keep in mind what happened and continues to mark Argentina.”