Ruta del tambor y el bombo

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Ruta del tambor y el bombo
The drummers gather at Andorra's town hall square
DatesHoly Week
FrequencyAnnual
Location(s)Albalate del Arzobispo, Alcañiz, Alcorisa, Andorra, Calanda, Híjar, La Puebla de Híjar, Samper de Calanda and Urrea de Gaén, Spain
Fiesta of International Tourist Interest
Designated2014

The Ruta del Tambor y el Bombo (literally "Drum and Bass Drum Route") is a celebration of Easter and the Passion of Christ that takes place in nine towns in south-eastern Aragon (Spain), in the province of Teruel: Albalate del Arzobispo, Alcañiz, Alcorisa, Andorra, Calanda, Híjar, la Puebla de Híjar, Samper de Calanda and Urrea de Gaén. During the Holy Week, a number of residents of those towns wear a special tunic and play either the drum or the bass drum at specified moments, also marching during processions. The combination of all the drums playing simultaneously creates a remarkably loud din.

The tradition establishes that all drum players must start playing at the same time at a certain moment, emulating the tremor after Jesus death. This beginning is called "Rompida de la hora" (literally, Breaking the hour) and starts in almost every village on Maundy Thursday at 12 pm immediately after special signaling in the Town Hall Square (except in Calanda, where it's at 12 noon on Good Friday). There is also an established moment, in Easter Saturday, at which drum playing must stop. Each town has its own drum rolls and a different color for their tunics.

This tradition might originate from some ancient ceremony, or more probably from the Middle Ages, when knights of the military orders could have brought the two percussion instruments to the land. The tradition became famous thanks to the filmmaker Luis Buñuel (a native from Calanda), who included images of it in some of his films.[1][better source needed]

Until the 1980s, men were the only ones who could play the drums in some of the towns. From that date, women have gradually incorporated.

This celebration was declared of National Tourist Interest in Spain in November 2005 save in the town of Híjar, declared in 1980, 25 years earlier than any other town in the route. On June 6, 2014, the Ministry of Industry and Tourism declared the Ruta del Tambor y el Bombo as Fiesta of International Tourist Interest.

In 2018 the Route's Lenten festivities was granted the status of Intangible Cultural Heritage by UNESCO alongside the other drumming festivals of Spain.

References

  1. ^ Buñuel film in Youtube
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Andalusia
Aragon
  • Holy Week in Saragossa (2014)
  • Ruta del tambor y el bombo including the Holy Weeks in Albalate del Arzobispo, Alcañiz, Alcorisa, Andorra, Calanda, Híjar, la Puebla de Híjar, Samper de Calanda and Urrea de Gaén (2014)
  • Fiestas del Pilar (2019)
Asturias
Canary Islands
Cantabria
  • Cantabrian Wars Fest (2019)
Castile–La Mancha
  • Corpus Christi in Toledo (1980)
  • Holy Week in Cuenca and its Religious Music Week (1980)
  • Holy Week in Hellín (2007)
  • Albacete Fair (2008)
  • Holy Week in Toledo (2014)
  • Fiestas Mayores of Almansa (2019)
Castile and León
Extremadura
  • Holy Week in Cáceres (2011)
  • Holy Week in Mérida (2018)
  • Carnival of Badajoz (2022)
Galicia
Community of Madrid
  • Fiestas of the Mutiny of Aranjuez (2014)
Region of Murcia
  • Fiesta de la Santísima y Vera Cruz de Caravaca (2004)
  • Holy Week in Cartagena (2005)
  • Festival del Cante de las Minas (2006)
  • The Burial of the Sardine in Murcia (2006)
  • Holy Week in Lorca (2007)
  • Holy Week in Murcia (2011)
  • Bando de la Huerta de Murcia (2012)
  • Carnival of Águilas (2015)
  • Carthaginians and Romans of Cartagena (2017)
  • Holy Week in Jumilla (2019)
  • The Night of the Drums of Mula (2022)
  • Holy Week in Cieza (2023)
Navarre
Valencian Community
Note: Within parentheses, the year when honored