Ana Veydó

[citation needed] Her second album, Las dueñas del canto recio, presents the song La mujer llanera, which became well known in the plains of Colombia.

In 2001, Ana Veydó travels with Cimarron to Washington for performances on behalf of Colombia at the Americartes Festival,[2] an event organized by the Kennedy Center.

The following year he took part in the III Meeting for the Promotion and Dissemination of Folklore of the Andean Countries held in Granada, Spain, and at the International Book Fair of Panama.

Joropo music from the Plains of Colombia, the band tours around Europe, United States, Asia, America and the Middle East.

The album presents songs such as La cocina de mi mamá, whose lyrics speak of women lifestyle and motherhood across the Colombian-Venezuelan plains.