Luro Mariachi (History of the
Mariachi)
The Wedding of Musical
Traditions
(excerpts from --- Mexico, The
Meeting of Two Cultures
1991 Higgins and Associates, New
York, NY)
Prior to the arrival of Cortes
the music of Mexico, played with
rattles, drums, reed and clay
flutes, and conch-shell horns,
was an integral part of
religious celebrations. Quickly,
however, as Christianity spread,
in many areas these instruments
gave way to instruments imported
by the Spanish:violins, guitars
and harps, brass horns, and
woodwinds. The Indian and
mestizo musicians not only
learned to play European
instruments, but also to build
their own, sometimes giving them
shapes and tunings of their own
invention.
Music and dance were important
elements of Spanish theatrical
productions, enormously popular
throughout the Spanish speaking
world during the colonial
period. The typical Spanish
theatrical orchestra of the
sixteenth, seventeenth, and
eighteenth centuries was
comprised of violins (usually
two), harp and guitars (or
guitar variants). It was from
this group that several of the
most distinctive regional
ensembles of Mexico developed,
including the Mariachi.

Mariachi - What Does It Mean?
Musicologists and folklorists
have argued for years over the
origin of the word - Mariachi.
The explanation that appears
most frequently - especially on
record jackets and in travel
brochures - is that it is a
variation of the French word
mariage, meaning wedding or
marriage, and comes from the
time in the nineteenth century
when Maximillian, a Frenchman,
was Emperor of Mexico.
According to this myth the
Mariachi was named by the French
after the celebration with which
it was most commonly associated.
But this explanation, always
regarded as highly doubtful by
linguists, was totally
discredited recently when a use
of the word was found that
predated the time when the
French arrived in Mexico.
Currently, however, the best
scholarly opinion is that the
word mariachi has native roots.
One theory is that it comes from
the name of the wood used to
make the platform on which the
performers danced to the music
of the village musicians. But
whatever its true source - and
the truth may never be
discovered with absolute
certainty - the word today has
one meaning that is crystal
clear: Mariachi means on of the
most exciting and enchanting
musical ensembles found anywhere
in the world.
Coming of Age: Mariachi Vargas
Although the roots of the
Mariachi go back hundreds of
years, there are no Bachs or
Beethovens in its early history
because Mariachi music was the
music of country people. Until
the 1930's Mariachi groups were
local and semi-professional.
They were almost entirely
unknown outside their own
region.
This began to change about 60
years ago, when the Mariachi
Vargas de Tecalitlán n, founded
by Gaspar Vargas in 1898, went
from Jalisco to Mexico City.
They were invited to play at the
inauguration in 1934 of populist
President Lá zaro Cá rdenas, one
of whose great interests was to
foster the native culture of
Mexico. Catching the Presidents
enthusiasm, urban sophisticates
took the folk arts to their
hearts, and the Mariachi Vargas
instantly became the toast of
the town. The initial success
was only the beginning.
Silvestre Vargas, who had taken
over from his father as leader
of the Mariachi Vargas in 1928,
soon hired a trained musician,
Rubí n Fuentes, as musical
director.
Fuentes, still actively involved
with the Mariachi Vargas more
than fifty years later, is one
of the towering figures in the
development of the Mariachi.
With the help of Silvestre
Vargas, he standardized the
arrangements of many of the
traditional sones composed many
exceptional new huapangos, and
wrote arrangements for many of
the legendary song writers and
singers of his generation,
including Pedro Infante, Miguel
Aceves Mejía, Lola Beltrán, and
José Alfredo Jiménez. By the
1950's he insisted that all his
musicians read music. These
innovations changed the way
Mariachi music moved from one
group to another. Gone was the
total reliance of the musicians
on their ears to pick up new
songs, and techniques.
With this giant step toward
professionalism coinciding with
the development of recordings,
radio and film, the Mariachi
Vargas was able to become the
ideal that all other groups
would emulate. With the addition
of two trumpets, a classical
guitar and more violins, by the
1950's the Mariachi ensemble had
become a complete, adaptable
orchestra, with the ability to
retain its traditional base
while it was assimilating new
musical ideas and styles. The
importance of Mariachi Vargas
cannot be overestimated. Its
arrangements have become the
definitive statements of what
the Mariachi should be.
The Mariachi at Special
Occasions
Mariachis often help celebrate
the great moments in the lives
of the Mexican people. With the
serenata (serenade), the
Mariachi participates in the
rite of courtship. In a society
where the young members of
opposite sexes were kept apart,
the serenata was a means of
communication by which a young
man could send a message of love
to the woman of his heart. In
many areas of Mexico, it is not
unusual to be awakened by the
sound of Las Mañ anitas, the
traditional song for saints
days, or birthdays. The Mariachi
is usually positioned
strategically on the street
beneath the window of the
festejada, but the sound of its
music echoes through the whole
neighborhood. Mariachis are also
commonly hired for baptisms,
weddings, patriotic holidays,
and even funerals. It is not
unusual for the deceased to
leave a list of favorite songs
to be sung beside the grave at
burial.
Mariachi music has been
incorporated into the Roman
Catholic Church's most sacred
ritual: the Mass. The Misa
Panamericana is a Mariachi folk
mass, sung in Spanish, that uses
traditional instruments to
create vivid new interpretations
of the traditional elements of
the service: Angelus, Kyrie
eleison, Gloria, Alleluia,
Offertory, Credo, Sanctus, and
Agnus Dei.
The first Mariachi Mass was the
concept of a Canadian priest,
Father Juan Marco Leclerc, and
has been celebrated in
Cuernavaca since 1966. It
originally took place in a small
chapel, but news of it spread so
rapidly, and the crowds grew so
large, that the regular Sunday
Mariachi Mass had be moved to
the Cathedral of Cuernavaca. It
is now frequently performed
throughout Mexico, and In many
areas in the United States where
people of Mexican origin live.
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The Beginning of the
Mariachi We Know Today
Although the origins of Mariachi
music go back hundreds of years,
in the form we know it the
Mariachi began in the nineteenth
century in the Mexican state of
Jalisco - according to popular
legend, in the town of Cocula.
The Mariachi was the distinctive
version of the Spanish
theatrical orchestra of violins,
harp and guitars which developed
in and around Jalisco. In other
areas such as Veracruz and the
Huasteca region in the
northeast, the ensemble evolved
differently. By the end of the
nineteenth century, in Cocula
the vihuela, two violins, and
the guitarró n (which had
replaced the harp) were the
instruments of the Mariachi.
The principal music played by
these early Mariachis was the
SON, the popular music of the
day. A mixture of folk
traditions from Spain, Mexico,
and Africa, the son was found in
many regions of the country. The
son from Jalisco is called the
son jalisciense. La Negra is the
best-known example.
Sones from other regions include
the son jarocho or veracruzano,
from the region around the Gulf
port of Veracruz; and the son
huasteco, from northeastern
Mexico. The most famous example
of the son jarocho is La Bamba .
A typical son huasteco, also
known as the huapango, is La
Malagueñ a. It is interesting to
note that there are some sones,
such as El Gusto, which are
common in all three regions and
clearly date back to a common
ancestor.
Mariachi and Dance
It is important to remember the
son-and other types of Mariachi
music- is not just music to be
played and sung. From the very
start it was music to be danced.
The traditional dance technique
associated with both the son
jalisciense and son jarocho is
the zapateado, a distinctive
type of footwork that originated
in Spain. When dancing the
zapateado the performers
skillfully drive the heels of
their boots or shoes into the
dance-floor, pounding out swift,
often syncopated rhythms which
complement the different rhythm
of the musical instruments. The
zapateado can literally reduce
even the most resistant dance
floor to splinters because of
the force with which it is
danced.
Each of the regional variations
of the son has its traditional
style of dance. The huapango or
son huasteco, for instance, like
the son jalisciense and son
jarocho, was originally danced
on wooden platforms, in some
areas mounted on earthen jugs.
To dance the huapango the
couples line up in opposing
columns. The upper part of the
body is held perfectly erect as
the feet perform rapid,
intricate, shuffling maneuvers.
Today it is sometimes performed
with a glass of water on the
head to show off the dancer's
incredible muscular control.
The lyrics of the sones
frequently describe country
life: in particular, the plants,
animals and people of the
region. These lyrics are highly
suggestive, often using imagery
of the courtship of farm animals
to describe the relations of men
and women. In the dance the
movements of the performers
often represent the farm-yard
courtship described in the
verses of the sones.
Another kind of music related to
the son and intimately connected
with a particular dance is the
jarabe. The jarabe, which has
many regional variations, is
really a medley of dance pieces,
including sones, danzas, jotas,
and polkas. No discussion of
Mariachi dance would be complete
without mentioning the famous
Jarabe Tapatio - the Mexican Hat
Dance. Associated with
Guadalajara in the state of
Jalisco, it has become the
national dance of Mexico. It is
highly stylized, with prescribed
movements and costumes.
The male wears the classic
outfit the Jalisco horsemen or
charro, while the female the
China, wears a hand-woven shawl
and a bright sequined skirt.
By the 1930's Mariachi musicians
had begun wearing the same traje
de charro, consisting of a
waist-length jacket and tightly
fitted wool pants which open
slightly at the ankle to fit
over a short riding boot. Both
pants and jacket are often
ornamented with embroidery,
intricately cut leather designs,
or silver buttons in a variety
of shapes. Prior to the 1930's,
photographs show early Mariachis
dressed in calzones de manta,
and huaraches, homespun white
cotton pants and shirts and
leather sandals, the clothes
worn by most peasants in
Jalisco.

The Unique Make-Up of the
Mariachi Ensemble
In the complete Mariachi group
today there are as many as six
to eight violins, two trumpets,
and a guitar - all standard
European instruments.
Then there is a high-itched,
round-backed guitar called the
vihuela, which when strummed in
the traditional manner gives the
Mariachi its typical rhythmic
vitality; a deep-voiced guitar
called the guitarró n which
serves as the bass of the
ensemble; and a Mexican folk
harp, which usually doubles the
base line, but also ornaments
the melody. While these three
instruments have European
origins, in their present form
they are strictly Mexican.
The sound that these instruments
combine to make is unique. Like
the sarape, which often used
widely contrasting colors side
by side - green and orange,
yellow and blue - the Mariachi
used sharply contrasting sounds:
the sweet sounds of the violins
against the brilliance of the
trumpets, and the deep sound of
the guitarró n against the
crisp, high voice of the vihuela;
and the frequent shifting
between syncopation and on-beat
rhythm. The resulting sound is
the heart and soul of Mexico.
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