The Venezuelan singer-songwriter demonstrated in the town of Uga why he "is one of the most popular Latin American artists in the Canary Islands and Spain," according to the Yaiza City Council.
"Carlos Baute sings and dances, and just as he plays the guitar, he also perfectly times the moments of the show to further captivate his followers, largely women, young and adult, who surrendered to the concert offered by Baute this Monday, May 15, in the tent of the fairgrounds to celebrate the Big Day of Uga and thus end the San Isidro Labrador festivities in style," he comments.
Undoubtedly, literally, the "Latin swing" took over the Uga tent with an audience devoted from beginning to end to the singing and dancing of Carlos Baute. A full house despite being a Monday, but "good music has no borders or restrictions," and even more so, "if it is an artist as charismatic as the Venezuelan, who from a very young age burst into the complicated musical world with that 'boyband' called Los Chamos," the Council points out.
Baute, who has roots in Tenerife, called the Canarian singer Tutto Durán to the stage to share their passion: music. With the audience in his pocket, the great protagonist of the night also ventured to dance with three girls who "jumped" onto the stage cheered on by Carlos Baute himself.
There were plenty of autographs in the middle of the concert, some signatures stamped on caps with the colors of the Venezuelan flag. Baute and his band of six musicians made a select tour of the singer's musical career, leaving almost for the closing, and among the shouts of "another, another," when he had already left for the dressing room, the song "Colgando en tus manos" that swept inside and outside of Spain together with the Madrid artist Marta Sánchez, who also visited Yaiza last September on the occasion of the Remedios Festivities, he recalls.
The artists from Yaiza who opened the show were the young singers Alexia, Elieser and Verónica Lucía, who presented the single "Llamas al lado" by Andrea Plaza, and the ballet "Dance Pop Juvenil", which, in tune with the night, offered a whirlwind of Latin music dance, rounded off a magical night.