Red yellow and blue song


Colors in Spanish Song: Rojo, Red, Azul, Blue | Video and Lyrics

Lyrics

May 03, 2021

Educational Music Video to learn the Basic Colors (Red, Blue, Yellow and Green) in Spanish by a Native Spanish speaker with lyrics below!

The following song will help your kids learn the 4 basic colors in Spanish in a fun way. The song has an easy language for toddlers and preschoolers to teach them the name of those colors. It includes basic Spanish phrases to help them associate each color with an element.

Red in Spanish = ROJO (pronounced as "roh-hoh").

Blue in Spanish = AZUL (pronounced as "ah-sool").

Yellow in Spanish = AMARILLO (pronounced as "ah-mah-ree-joh").

Green in Spanish = VERDE (pronounced as "ber-theh").

Download printables below!

  • The word "color" is also known as "colour" depending on where you are! "Color" is used in the USA.
  • Red, blue and yellow are Primary Colors (the most basic colors).
  • Green is a secondary color (a secondary color is the result of mixing 2 primary colors).
  • The color "Amarillo" (yellow) is pronounced slightly different in some Hispanic countries where they pronounce the "ll" a bit different with the English "ee" sound.
  • Many children start learning colors during preschool. Color recognition is an important component in their cognitive development. Use this song as a complimentary activity to learn colors among other things you can do such as: painting, playing with playdough mixing some colors, having conversations about color (what colors do they see in their room, their food, clothing, pick up all the toys that have the color "red", etc.).
  • Keep in mind that the little ones don't have the ability to understand that light green and dark green are both green.

The world is full of colors so embrace it to learn colors :-)

Colors in Spanish: Rojo-Red, Azul-Blue, Amarillo-Yellow, Verde-Green

Download Lyrics Here!

Learn more Spanish colors with this other video: Naranja (Orange), Rosa (Pink), Morado (Purple), Marrón (Brown), Gris (Gray).

Lyrics: Colors Song in Spanish

Rojo, red. Rojo, red.
Azul, blue. Azul, blue.
Amarillo, yellow. Amarillo, yellow.
Verde, green. Verde, green.

¿Qué es rojo? What is red?

¿Qué es rojo?
El tomate es rojo,
The tomato is red.

¿Qué es azul?
El cielo es azul,
The sky is blue.

¿Qué es amarillo?
El sol es amarillo,
The sun is yellow.

¿Qué es verde?
El árbol es verde,
The tree is green.

Rojo, red. Rojo, red.
Azul, blue. Azul, blue.
Amarillo, yellow. Amarillo, yellow.
Verde, green. Verde, green.

Music Arrangement: Jesica Levi.

  • Download Printable HERE.
  • 11 Basic Colors in Spanish and English: Pack of 3 Pages.
  • List of the 11 Basic Colors in Spanish for Children: 1 Page with Colors in Circles.
  • 10 Colors with Elements and Bilingual Sentences with Spanish masculine and feminine words (UN vs. UNA): 4 Pages.

Keep learning Spanish in a fun way :)

Jess
Spanish for Kids
YouTube. com/CantaConJess

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Song Lyrics and Sound Clip


The Primary and Secondary Colors
Art Song about Teaching the Primary Colors
Sharon Luanne Rivera: School Art Theatre Productions


This song is available on Sharon Luanne Rivera's Rappin' Clappin' Singin' About Art
.

Now available: Rappin' Clappin' Singin' 'bout Art Musical Play

 

Red, yellow, blue, are the primary colors.
Purple, orange, green are the secondary colors. 
Red and yellow, they make orange.
Blue and red, they make purple.  
Yellow and blue, they make green.  
Mix 'em all together, you get gray.

Chorus:  
Red, yellow, blue are the primary colors.  
Purple, orange, green are the secondary colors.  
Red, yellow, blue are the primary colors.  
Purple, orange, green are secondary.

Red, yellow, blue are the primary colors.  
Purple, orange, green are the secondary colors.  
Red, yellow, blue are the primary colors.  
Purple, orange, green are secondary.

(Spoken):  
Red, yellow, blue, purple, orange, green.
Red, yellow, blue, purple, orange, green.
Red, yellow, blue, purple, orange, green.

Red, yellow, blue are the primary colors.

Chorus

Red and yellow, they make orange.  
Blue and red, they make purple.  
Yellow and blue, they make green.  
Mix 'em all together, you get gray.

Chorus

Red, yellow, blue, are the primary colors.

See more of our Art Appreciation, Color and Physical Science Song Lyrics.

Many thanks to Sharon Luanne Rivera for permission to display these lyric excerpts.
© School Art Theatre Productions. All rights reserved. Used with permission.


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Elvis Presley. Elvis Presley (19)56)

20 years before The Clash used the same color combination, Elvis Presley knew how compelling a green and pink typeface could be. The photo for the star's debut album was taken on July 31, 1955 during a concert in Tampa, Florida. A snapshot of a young artist ready to take on the world instantly grabs attention, embodying the primordial power of raw rock and roll. And preparing an unsuspecting America of the mid-50s for a youthful cultural revolution even before the stylus touched the vinyl. Two decades later, British punks The Clash used the same font for the cover of their landmark London Calling album.

The Beatles. Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967)

On the recording of The Beatles' craziest album, called Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band took £50,000, almost half a year of work and 700 studio hours. For the cover, the musicians, dressed in bright uniforms, were photographed on March 30, 1967 years old against the backdrop of cardboard figures of those celebrities whom they themselves considered important to themselves. Carl Gustav Jung, Edgar Poe, Bob Dylan, Oscar Wilde, Albert Einstein, Lewis Carroll, Aleister Crowley and others flaunt on the cover of Sergeant Pepper. On the back of the sleeve, for the first time in the history of recording, the lyrics of the album's songs were placed. The designer who created this miracle was highly honored: in June 2002, 70-year-old Peter Blake was knighted by Her Majesty.

The Velvet Underground. The Velvet Underground & Nico (1969)

The debut album of the gloomy American anti-hippies The Velvet Underground did not achieve commercial success, which did not prevent him from taking pride of place among the most important records in the history of rock. According to legend, each owner of the coveted vinyl, which at 19In 69 he heard this strange, gloomy and viscous music, founded his own group. The cover of the album features a huge yellow banana with the caption: "Slowly peel off the skin and look." This is the work of famed pop artist Andy Warhol, who was the manager and producer of The Velvet Underground. On early releases of the record, a banana sticker was stuck on the sleeve, and beneath it was an image of a peeled banana printed on the sleeve itself.

The Beatles. Abbey Road (1969)

Where do all the Beatles go when they get to London? Of course, to Abbey Road, the same street where the studio of the same name is located and which The Beatles cross on the cover of their latest album, also called Abbey Road. The iconic photo session took place on a hot day on August 8, 1969 years old. The photographer had ten minutes to take a picture: a section of a busy street was blocked by the police specifically for the sake of the musicians. To this day, passers-by love to walk in single file on the famous zebra, unnerving London drivers. Parodies of the famous cover are simply innumerable. The most famous was made by the Red Hot Chili Peppers, who walked across the street naked with socks on in causal places.

The Rolling Stones. Sticky Fingers (1971)

Andy Warhol again! At a New York party in 1969, the pop art guru casually hinted to The Rolling Stones vocalist Mick Jagger that it would be great to put a real zipper from jeans on the cover of the next record. A year later, the crazy idea was implemented in the design of the Sticky Fingers album. The whole envelope was taken up by a photo of a man's fly that was tight to the hips - with a real zipper that could be unzipped. Of course, there were problems with such a radical design: during transportation, the lightning pressed into the album, scratching the vinyl and records lying in a pile. In addition to the scandalous fly, for the first time the new logo of the group flaunted on the sleeve of the disc - a cheeky protruding scarlet tongue.

Pink Floyd. The Dark Side Of The Moon (1973)

The Dark Side Of The Moon, a suite about birth, madness and time, performed by British rock wizards Pink Floyd, has long been a classic. The cover of the disc has forever entered the canon of modern design. The visionaries of the Hipgnosis studio placed a prism on it that refracts the light beam (moreover, indigo color was deliberately removed from the spectrum to simplify the design). On the back there is a prism that produces spectrum convergence (this does not happen in nature, but what can you do for the sake of heightening the effect!) In addition to a luxurious sleeve, two posters were attached to the plate. One was printed with concert shots of the band, the other was a photo of the Giza pyramids taken under a full moon. The members of Pink Floyd insisted that the inclusion of posters in the artwork did not increase the price of the record.

Bob Marley & The Wailers. Catch A Fire (1973)

Bob Marley's 1973 album Catch A Fire turned him and his band The Wailers into international stars. To match the title, there was also a cover of the record: the entire space of the cover was occupied by the image of a Zippo lighter. But that's not all. The top of the cardboard lighter flipped open like a real cigarette lighter, revealing the record itself. Of course, the production of such a cover was not cheap, because the two elements of the “lighter” had to be connected manually. Therefore, it was not possible to arrange the entire circulation of the disc in this way. Only the first 20,000 copies were released in the "lighter" cover. Further reprints were packaged in a regular sleeve with a large portrait of Bob Marley smoking a huge joint.

Pink Floyd. Animals (1977)

Pink Floyd's tenth album is called Animals. The idea for the disc design was designed by bass player Roger Waters. He drove by London's Battersea power station every day and offered to shoot her on the cover. However, the building was not enough. The album was called "Animals" after all, so it was necessary to write some animal in the envelope. An inflatable pig 10 meters high was ordered. She was inflated with helium and launched into the sky above the station. Not the first time, but the right photo was taken. In one of the takes, the pig flew off to Kent and scared away the cows of one farmer. The enraged farmer did not know that he was involved in the creation of one of the most outstanding record covers in history!

Nirvana. Nevermind (1991)

Is there anything more punk than putting male genitalia on an album cover? Nirvana did just that, although they were modeled on a child swimming in a pool. The controversial Nevermind album cover may be taken as an allegory for chasing the almighty dollar, but in fact (according to Geffen Records art director Robert Fisher) it is only the result of Kurt Cobain's obsession with a documentary film about underwater birth. Every five years or so, that same boy (at 19'91 - four-month-old Spencer Alden) recreates the cover for posterity, and the Nevermind cover design has inspired countless parodies and tributes, including Homer Simpson.

Blur. ThinkTank (2003)

For the cover art of their seventh album, Britpop heroes Blur employed the mysterious (then) street artist Banksy, whose witty stencil work covers walls around the world from his native Bristol to Palestine to Los Angeles.


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