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La Voz De Melo isn't trying to be Montevideo's slick urban stations. It's rooted in Melo, a city in Uruguay's northeast, and sounds like it. The music leans local - folk, candombe, milonga, with some Brazilian influences from across the border. You won't hear repetitive playlists. It's community radio at its best: presenters pick tracks that feel personal, not corporate. The station name means 'The Voice of Melo' and that's exactly what it is. Some segments are in Spanish, others mix in Portuguese... Uruguayan Spanish with a rural warmth. It's the kind of station you put on to feel like you're…
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