Los Sin ton ni son

Founded in 1987, they remained active until 1992, when they decided to take a break. They would return to the Carnival in 2007.


Los Silenciosos

This Murga made its first appearance in the 2014 Carnival.


Los Sarandajos del Risco

This is one of the Carnival's historic Murgas although the last time it took part was in 2000.

It made a name for itself for several years in a row for taking the First Prize for Costume in 1997, 1998, 1999 and 2000.


Los Rockefellers

Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Carnival

This Murga, which in 2011 celebrated thirty years on the stage of Santa Catalina Park, won the First Prize for Performance in 1984.


Los Nietos de SaryMánchez

This Murga made their début in the 2013 Carnival, where they won the Third Prize for Performance. Since then, they have always been among the winners of the festivities. In 2014, the group took the Third Prize for Costume.

They won the First Prize for Performance in 2015, 2017 and 2020, and took the prizes to their hometown in Telde.

They were also awarded the Prize Tomás Perez for Best Lyrics in 2015, and in 2016, they received the Criticón Prize.


Los Moskeados

Los Moskeados made their début in the Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Carnival Murga Contest in 2018.


Los Marchosos

This Murga, now disbanded, was the first group to include women among its members. It was a group of friends who used to go to football games together, for they were U.D. Las Palmas fans. They used to get together in the Bar Polo in 1978, where they decided to bring this project into being and started preparing Carnival lyrics.

In 1985 they won First Prize in the contest, which they shared with Los Totorotas group.


Los Legañosos

Founded in: 1982 to 1991 - After an eleven-year pause they started up again in 2002.

In 2015 they took a First Prize for Costume and a Second Prize for Performance back to El Carrizal, and in 2016 it was the other way round and they took the First Prize for Performance and the Second Prize for Costume.

Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Carnival

Tomás Pérez Prize for Best Lyrics 2005

Tomás Pérez Prize for Best Lyrics 2014 for the song Con la Sanidad no se Juega (The Public Healthcare Isn't to Be Messed With).

First Prize for Costume 2015: 'Mil y Una Noches Haciendo Dieta para Acabar Jarto de Galletas' ('1001 Nights on a Diet, to End Up Stuffed to the Gills with Biscuits')

First Prize for Performance 2016

Second Prize for Costume 2016

Tomás Pérez Prize for Best Lyrics 2016 for the song El Repartidor Siempre Llama Dos Veces (The Delivery Man Always Rings Twice)

Prize for Best Percussion in 2017