Conceptualizing Mariachi as Postmodern Music Education
José R. Torres-Ramos, PhD Student
University of North Texas
Conceptualizing Mariachi p. 2
Conceptualizing Mariachi as Postmodern Music Education
Abstract
Since the mid-1970s, formal mariachi learning through ensemble performance was initiated in
universities and more recently public schools. Today the popularity of scholastic mariachi
ensembles challenges a long history of modernism in music education. The positioning of
mariachi ensembles in formal music instructional settings, can be framed as a Postmodern shift
from traditional forms of music teaching. However, modernist practices within music education,
most evident in western schools and universities, permeate persistent narratives that resist change
and enforce the status quo. Mariachi’s traditional forms of transmission and performance
practice are altered, as formal curriculums shift it from an oral tradition to written, marginalizing
its defining socio-cultural, historical, and musical constructs, to conform with the dominant
paradigm. This paper examines the development and challenges of formalized mariachi
instruction conceptualized as postmodern music education. The politics of education, cultural
representation, authenticity, are discussed within the binary position of modern/post modern
thought.
Conceptualizing Mariachi p. 3
Introduction
Mariachi is one of the many traditional folk music styles in Mexico, and has become a
symbol of regional and national identity. Over the last twenty years, mariachi as an expressive
music has risen as a symbol of Latino cultural identity and Mexican nationalism in the United
States. This popularity has given rise to the establishment of mariachi ensembles within many
university and secondary school music programs in the US. Mariachi learning in formalized
settings parallels the growing interest in the last fifty years for alternative instrumental ensembles
in public schools, which can be attributed in no small part to the major shifts in the cultural
demographic make-up of the US and the burgeoning research in ethnomusicology.1 The use of
mariachi ensembles for music education creates a space where competing ideologies and cultural
narratives intersect drawing attention to the politics of cultural representation, ownership and
authenticity. This intersection suggests an inconsistency in music education represented by a
long history of modernist influence. “Modernist practices have permeated music education by
means of strictly controlled pedagogical systems and ordered curricula reinforcing the
dominance of a Western European Music Canon, resulting in the exclusion of ‘other’ music and
community participation within the sphere of music learning.”2
This paper conceptualizes formal mariachi instruction through scholastic ensembles, as a
Postmodern approach to music education. The analysis includes a discussion of conflicting
metanarratives within modernist approaches to music learning and cultural acquisition contrasted
by postmodern theory. Implications will be presented for contextualizing the study of mariachi
including considerations for the socio-cultural aspects of learning. Utilizing a rich literature of
research on modernist/postmodernist narratives within music education, I also draw upon my
1
2
Bernadette Colley, “Educating Teachers to Transform the Trilogy,” Journal of Music Teacher Education 19, no. 1 (2009): 56–67.
David Lines, “Music Education, Modernism and Public Music Pedagogy,” (paper presented at the Music Education SIG, American Educational
Research Association Conference, New York, March, 2008), para. 1.
Conceptualizing Mariachi p. 4
own experiences as a student, musician, teacher and practitioner of the mariachi tradition for the
past 25 years both at the secondary and collegiate level. The goal of this paper is to bring
awareness of a growing trend towards culturally responsive music teaching in order to further
develop the formal study of mariachi learning and performance.
Mariachi Scholarship
Ethnomusicology and anthropology have produced the most extensive research on the
mariachi tradition. Descriptive ethnographies, oral interviews and archival research have
examined performance practices, transmission, historical development, instrumentation, and
socio-cultural identity. Mark Fogelquist provided one of the first analyses in English, examining
the manners of work, ambiance, and transmission framing the study around the musical
characteristics of the son jaliscience,3 commonly accepted as the definitive song style.4 Steven
Ray Pearlman did an excellent ethnography exploring the social relationships among mariachi
groups in Los Angeles and the corollary socio-cultural and economic issues including song style,
musical performance structure and content in performance.5 Candida Jácquez examined musical
performance as a mode of cultural communication with multiple layers of social meaning, and
how musical expression actively reflects the social engagement of Mexican descent
communities, specifically within urban U.S. contexts.6 Donald Henriques analyzed the
development of mariachi as an ensemble and a repertory between 1920 and 1942 with particular
attention to relationships with the Mexican and U.S. radio, recording and film industries.7 Jesús
Jauregui wrote one of the most comprehensive historical monographs to date, on the
3
4
5
6
A regional folk song type indigenous to the state of Jalisco
Mark S.Fogelquist, “Rhythm and Form in the Contemporary Son Jaliscience.” (master’s thesis, University of California, Los Angeles, 1975).
Steven Ray Pearlman, “Mariachi Music in Los Angeles,” PhD diss. University of California, Los Angeles, 1988.
Candida F. Jacquez, “Cantando de Ayer (singing of yesterday): Performing History, Ethnic Identity, and Traditionalism in U.S. Based Urban
Mariachi”. PhD diss., University of Michigan, 2000.
7
Donald Andrew Henriques, “Performing Nationalism: Mariachi, Media and the Transformation of a Tradition (1920-1942).” PhD diss.
University of Texas at Austin, 2006.
Conceptualizing Mariachi p. 5
development of mariachi from the early 1850s to present, filled with photographs, archival
documents, and illustrations offering comprehensive analysis of mariachi and its development
from rural regional music to global icon.8 Mary-Lee Mulholland presented a sociological study
illustrating the ways in which mariachi performance entangles with representations of gender,
sexuality, race, region, and class producing a conceptualization of the Mexican ideal.9 Daniel
Sheehy formulated a concise introduction into the world of mariachi music, using case studies of
instrument makers, interviews with legendary musicians and briefly describing the historical
development of mariachi in Mexico and its migration into United States culture.10 Russell
Rodríguez illustrated the transformations of mariachi performance practice and transmission in
new performance spaces in schools, universities and cultural centers, as a consequence of
transnational migration.11 Lauryn Salazar, through archival and field-based research, examined
early antecedents of mariachi music in California, the innovation of festivals, publishing, and
education programs in the US, extrapolating their impact on the tradition as a whole.12 Rodríguez
and Salazar’s work respectively, represents the strongest efforts to critically examine mariachi
learning in the US, albeit from the area of ethnomusicology. Within the field of music education
only four research studies with an explicit focus on mariachi instruction have been reported.
Sylvia Clark presented a descriptive study of mariachi affirming its symbolism of Mexican
culture in the US, citing language as a contributing factor.13 “The growing Hispanic population
and the use of Spanish as the second most popular language in the United States seem to ensure
8
9
Jesús Jáuregui, El Mariachi: Símbolo Musical de México. Mexico City: Santillana, 2007.
Mary-Lee Mulholland, “Excessive Mariachi: Performing Race, Sexuality and Regionalism in Jalisco, Mexico,” PhD diss. York University,
2007.
10
Daniel E. Sheehy, Mariachi music in America: Experiencing Music, Expressing Culture. New York: Oxford University Press, 2006.
11
Russell C. Rodríguez, “Cultural Production, Legitimation, and the Politics of Aesthetics: Mariachi Transmission, Practice, and Performance in
the United States,” PhD diss. University of California Santa Cruz, 2006.
12
Lauryn Camille Salazar, “From Fiesta to Festival: Mariachi Music in California and the Southwestern United States,” (PhD diss. University of
California Los Angeles, 2011).
13
Sylvia Clark, “Mariachi Music as a Symbol of Mexican Culture in the Unites States,” International Journal of Music Education 23, (2005):
227-237.
Conceptualizing Mariachi p. 6
that mariachi music will continue to become more important throughout the country …”14 She
concluded that the establishment of mariachi programs in secondary schools indicated that ethnic
music occupies an increasingly significant role in music education. Angela Morgan-Thornton
similarly conducted a descriptive study on mariachi programs in the Southwestern United States,
through interviews in order to extract content knowledge and report on status from the field.15
Carlos Abril completed a case study of one teacher’s use of mariachi as way to reach to Latino
students.16 The study draws attention to the intersection of cultural politics of authenticity,
ownership and transnationalism in the music classroom. One of the central issues is student
resistance to acceptance of a “white” teacher, who did not speak Spanish, teaching a Mexican
music tradition symbolic of ethnic and cultural identity. The most significant study from music
education to date was reported by William Ricketts.17 The study gathered data on the status of
mariachi programs analyzing pedagogical practices, content knowledge bases, and specific skill
sets of selected mariachi instructors in K12 schools in Texas in order to ascertain the important
determinants of effective mariachi instruction. All though the expanding body of literature
represents a growing interest in mariachi scholarship within the academy, more is needed in light
of the growth of US scholastic mariachi ensembles. This growing US mariachi tradition
provokes conflicting narratives and inconsistencies within music education historically
influenced by modernist tendencies.
Historical Overview of Modernism
14
15
Clark, “Mariachi Music as a Symbol,” 235.
Angela Michelle Morgan-Thornton, “A Study of Selected High School Mariachi Programs in the Southwest,” (master’s thesis, New Mexico
State University, 2003).
16
Carlos R. Abril, “Responding to Culture in the Instrumental Music Programme: A Teacher’s Journey,” Music Education Research 11, no.1
(2009): 77-91.
17
William Kenneth Ricketts, “Mariachi as a Music Education Genre: A Study of Program Status, Pedagogical Practices, and Activities,” (PhD
diss. Boston University, Boston, 2013).
Conceptualizing Mariachi p. 7
Modernity, naming the period of history as well as its underlying belief-system, traces its
origins back to the 18th Century European Enlightenment, maturing toward the end of the 19th
century.18 The aims of modernity were “to develop objective science, universal morality and law,
and autonomous art, according to their inner logic or internal structure.”19 Through the growth of
secularism motivated by an omnipotent faith in science and industrialization, the leaders of
Enlightenment set out to ‘modernize’ the world boosting productivity, prosperity, and social life
through research and means-ends forms of organization. Modernization and its guiding belief
system (modernity) increased Western productivity enormously, while dehumanizing employees
through strict standardization of tasks, suppression of individual initiative, responsibility, strict
supervision, long hours and rigorous production monitoring.20 Modernism was an aesthetic
philosophical response to more traditional, classical and authoritarian forms of thinking,
including the arts.21 Western art music in the 20th century embodied this philosophy by breaking
with past musical conventions. The most recognized leader of this movement was Carl
Schoenberg, who used atonality and Serialism to break with the previous conventions used
during the Classical and Romantic periods.22 “The characteristic of a discipline to criticize itself
‘not in order to subvert it, but to entrench it more firmly in its area of competence’, sums up the
modernist tendency to view fields of knowledge as linear progress, along with the promotion of
the original and innovative.”23 Modernism was a reaction to the dichotomous tension between
autonomy, referring to music in a complete self-contained system (formalism) and contingency,
18
19
20
21
22
23
Krishan Kumar, From Post-Industrial to Post-Modern Society. Oxford: Blackwell, 1995.
David Harvey, The Condition of Postmodernity. Oxford: Blackwell, 1989, 9.
David J. Elliott, Modernity, “Postmodernity and Music Education Philosophy,” Research Studies in Music Education 17, (2001): 32-41.
Lines, “Music Education, Modernism,” para. 1.
Ibid.
Ibid.
Conceptualizing Mariachi p. 8
the embedding of forms of music within cultural, political or ideological contexts.24 David J.
Elliott discusses how Western mass education through public schooling is a cornerstone of
modernity and the modern nation state.25
“On one hand, schools and universities make cultural capital and economic success
accessible and achievable for many. On the other hand, the public tends to assume that it
is natural to educate all children in factory-like settings based on modernity’s worship of
scientific-industrial constructs. These constructs include curricular ‘objectives’,
standardized curricula, standardized achievement tests, teacher-centered methods,
restricted instructional time and age-segregated or ability-segregated classes.”26
Many institutions of mass education mimic modernist bureaucratic institutions where
standardization, centralization, mass production and mass consumption are the norm.27
During the Romantic period, the music of Richard Wagner represented the rise of cultural
nationalism in Germany. Wagner explored the mix of cultural narratives, in contrast to the
logical forms created by Hadyn and Mozart. His music can be viewed as modernist, informed by
progressive and nationalist narratives.28 Ironically as Wagner’s compositions continued the move
away from tonality, 20th century modernist composers led by Schoenberg and the Vienna school
24
25
Ibid.
David, J. Elliott, “Philosophical Perspectives on Research,” in The New Handbook of Research on Music Teaching and Learning: A Project of
the Music Educator’s National Conference, ed. Richard Colwell and Carol Richardson. (Oxford University Press, 2001), 85-104.
26
Ibid.
27
Andy Hargreaves, Changing Teachers, Changing Times: Teacher’s Work and Culture in the Postmodern Age. (New York: Teachers College
Press, 1994).
28
Ibid.
Conceptualizing Mariachi p. 9
rejected his legacy. “Wagner’s immense popularity was seen as somewhat representing the
aesthetic blandness of an increasing phenomenon of mass culture, and music was becoming
perceived as trapped in the predetermined illustrative expectations of that audience.”29 Therefore
as a consequence to music’s increasing popularity through commercial commodification,
modernists became more elite and detached from the musical interests of the masses.30 Leading
to a separation of classical music from mainstream popular music during the 20th century, “This
detachment is still noticeable today and is played out in the differences between high-art music
conservatoriums and general music education in state schools.”31 Music education tends to
marginalize “other” musics by creating a means of institutional gatekeeping that encourages
university teacher preparation programs and consequently their graduates, to continue to
conceive and perpetrate practices that alienate the public.32
Thus self-perpetuated modernism influence continues preserving a musical canon of
hierarchical repertoire encompassing a tradition emphasized by the evolution of a higher form of
art33 and emphasizes the production of contemporary art-music marginalizing or excluding
popular and commercial forms of music.34 Ironically 20th century modern music broke with
classical conventions, however the two are joined through a promotion of elitism and ideological
exclusion of contradictory music forms.35 Other music forms outside the influence of modernist
views, including jazz, popular musicals, commercial rock, and Hollywood film music, appeared
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
Lines, “Music Education, Modernism,” para. 2.
Ibid.
Ibid, para. 5.
Ibid.
Bruno Nettl, Heartland Excursions: Ethnomusicological Reflections on Schools of Music. (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1995).
Lines, “Music Education, Modernism,” para. 5.
Ibid.
Conceptualizing Mariachi p. 10
anticipating the later emergence of interest in ethnic music,36 foreshadowing the popularity of
mariachi. Postmodernist theory in music attempts to re-incorporate these marginalized music
forms into accepted music learning.
Postmodern Thought in Music
Postmodernist theory in the arts, is openly interpreted.as the historical epoch, or that
which followed modernism and secondly, the style which is an aesthetic response to
modernism.37 “Postmodern musicology emerged in the 1980s from the thought that a ‘paradigm
shift’38 was required in music due to a modernist ‘theoretical impasse’39 in the field.”40 Scott
identifies eight main themes guiding postmodern musicology:
(1) a concern with social, historical and political processes that inform music, (2) a
concern with critical theory and musical hermeneutics, (3) an avoidance of modernist
teleological assumptions of historical narratives, (e g the inevitability of atonality), (4) a
readiness to engage in problematic issues of marginalization (eg issues of gender in
music), subject positions and universality, (5) a readiness to contest the binary divide
between classical and popular musics, (6) a readiness to study the music of different
cultures and of extending such understandings beyond explicit cultural self-evaluation,
(7) a readiness to consider that meanings are inter-textual and to examine a broad range
36
37
38
Ibid.
Ibid, para. 5.
Derek, Scott, “Postmodernism and Music,” in The Routledge Companion to Postmodernism, ed. Stuart Sim, (New York: Routledge, 2001),
134.
39
Ibid.
40
Lines, “Music Education, Modernism,” para. 11.
Conceptualizing Mariachi p. 11
of discourses to explain music, and (8) a readiness to respond to the multiplicity of
music’s contemporary functions (eg mixed media).”41
Historically, music education is concerned with qualifying music and determining what is
worthy of academic study. Postmodernism seeks new ways to understand music in order to teach
music learning. The growing popularity of mariachi in secondary institutions and universities
creates a catalyst for analysis and awareness.
Historical and Socio-Cultural Performance Contexts
An analysis of the etymology of the word mariachi places its origins in Central Mexico
beginning around the middle of the 19th century, however its contemporary sphere of influence
covers half the country to the west extending from the northernmost border of Sonora all the way
down to the southern tip of Oaxaca.42 As Figure 1 shows, its highest area of activity
andinfluence covers the regions composing Jalisco, Michocan, Nayarit, and Colima.43 Written
accounts point to various regional instrumental folk ensembles that called themselves mariachi,
each with both common and distinctive instrumentation. Music making was collective, informal,
and generationally passed down through oral transmission. However, what was called mariachi
during the 19th century vaguely resembled the romantic image of the singing cowboy created in
the Mexican cinema nearly eighty years later. The contemporary image of mariachi was created
and manufactured as part of a large-scale effort by the government for nation building and
creating a legitimizing continuity with Mexico’s past to create a collective history and identity. It
41
42
43
Scott, “Postmodernism and Music,” 145-6.
Jesús Jáuregui, El Mariachi: Símbolo Musical de México, (Mexico City: Santillana, 2007).
Ibid.
Conceptualizing Mariachi p. 12
Figure 1 Regional mariachi activity in Mexico.44
was later institutionalized within the collective consciousness through Mexico’s golden age of
radio and cinema. This commercialized image, strongly characterized by both visual and musical
imagery, has been reconstructed within the US consciousness reflecting Mexican and Latino
American sensibilities. “Mariachi has to be understood as a transnational product, which moves
back and forth across the US-Mexico border, with or without a visa, as recordings, traditions,
practices, and as people.”45 As such, the forms of transmission and performance practice have
also become salient especially with its introduction to new spaces, although there is a common
visual and musical aesthetic commonly performed by most mariachi musicians.
44
45
Ibid.
Rodríguez, Cultural Production, Legitimation, 32.
Conceptualizing Mariachi p. 13
Although there is growing body literature for teaching mariachi, many are grounded in a
Western art aesthetic that inadvertently reinforces modernist conceptual models.46 Developing a
comprehensive approach to teaching mariachi requires understanding its traditional forms of
transmission, the range of performance practices, and the socio-cultural aesthetics that clearly
differentiate its pedagogy from that of the “trilogy of band, orchestra and choir …”47 Rodríguez
summarizes the impetus for understanding:
“Mariachi music is a cultural expression that historically has been reified as a public
display of performative aesthetics that included music, song and dance in which both
women and men participated with specific roles of dancers and musicians, respectively,
in Mexico. With the commodification of this expression it had become framed as a
performative expression practiced solely by Mexicano working-class males in Mexico
and later in the United States …Today, mariachi has to be reframed to make sense of the
participation of people that do not signify the Mexicano working-class male, or the
‘traditional’ practitioners.’”48
One way of contextualizing pedagogy for mariachi is through an analysis of the varying
performance contexts utilized by mariachi musicians. Pearlman states that the differences in
mariachi performance, “are primarily context dependent and in fact the interaction of all features
of mariachi performance … delineate a continuum of performance styles, centering around three
nodes … regarded as substyles [sic] of mariachi performance, and are referred to by mariachis as
46
See the following literature on teaching mariachi, James Gordon Bennett Jr., “A Guide for the Performance of Trumpet Mariachi Music in
Schools.” (PhD diss. University of North Texas, 1979); William Gradante, ed. Foundations of Mariachi Education. (Lanham: Rowman &
Littlefield Education; Published in partnership with MENC, 2008); Patricia W. Harpole, “Curricular Applications of Hispanic Music in the
Southwestern United States.” (PhD diss., University of California, Los Angeles, 1980); Jeff Nevin, The Virtuoso Mariachi. (Maryland: University
Press of America, 2002).
47
Bernadette Colley, “Educating Teachers to Transform the Trilogy,” Journal of Music Teacher Education 19, no. 1 (2009): 57.
48
Rodríguez, “Cultural Production, Legitimation”, 30.
Conceptualizing Mariachi p. 14
al talón, planta (and chamba), and ‘show.’”49 In mariachi performance practice, al talón refers
to musicians soliciting song requests from patrons for a tip or fee, usually in a bar or restaurant
venue. The practice plays a central role to the income generated by working mariachi groups.
Planta refers to a regular standing performance venue usually a restaurant or bar. The style of
work may be al talón or the restaurant may pay the group to provide entertainment at no cost to
the clientele. There also may be a combination of base pay provided by the restaurant to the
mariachi, supplemented by income generated al talón. Chamba literally means a job and/or gig
as used in musician and vocational labor vernacular. Chambas are performances paid at a
negotiated fee usually based on a minimum hourly rate, guaranteeing amount of compensation
for each musician. Each one of these sub-styles as characterized by Pearlman, contains distinct
and overlapping musical and cultural expectations by both the musician and audience
participants.
In the 25 years since Pearlman’s research was conducted, mariachi has proliferated
throughout the US, entering new performance spaces and creating a “diversification of mariachi
practitioners in terms of gender, ethnicity, and class.”50 This has resulted in a newer generation
of mariachi musicians with more formal training and sensibilities. Many researchers have
categorized performance context in regards to the physical spaces where mariachi groups
perform. Rodríguez categorizes 3 types of mariachi ensemble – the working, show and school
mariachi.51 A common characteristic and more pragmatic approach for curricular purposes would
be to delineate context through the active or passive participation of the audience in determining
repertoire to be performed by a particular ensemble. The audience-driven-repertoire context has
49
50
51
Pearlman, “Mariachi Music,” 244.
Rodríguez, “Cultural Production, Legitimation”, 1.
Ibid.
Conceptualizing Mariachi p. 15
historically influenced mariachi-working practice and performance space. This can be best
categorized as the “al talón” or “show” approach to performance. The al talón context of
performance utilizes “a repertoire established through audience requests.”52 The ability of the
mariachi to successfully navigate requests by clients dominates the socio-cultural and musical
aspects of this performance context. In short, working mariachi groups have a vast repertoire that
is not formally rehearsed and whose performance is not influenced by technical virtuosity.
Working mariachi ensembles utilize standardized arrangements of popular songs in order to meet
consumer needs, while simultaneously continuing to acquire new repertoire to satisfy the
saliency of popular music fashion. As Pearlman describes:
“Customer satisfaction is maintained in part by the ability to perform all songs requested,
in part by the personal attention given them by the ensemble. Even when a song is
requested that is not universally known, or which has no model or standard arrangement,
the use of formulaic structures enables performance as long as one of the musicians
knows the lyrics.”53
The al talón context usually occurs in a restaurant venue where the mariachi works under an
agreement to play for patrons. However, most traditional groups usually consisting of Mexican
born musicians work specifically in an audience-driven-repertoire context, regardless of the
physical space, hence, my reductionism. The al talón performance context requires a different set
of music skills, not emphasized in traditional Western ways of learning music, including ear
playing, improvisation and transposition. The majority of mariachi groups both in Mexico and
52
53
Ibid, 30.
Pearlman, “Mariachi Music,” 248.
Conceptualizing Mariachi p. 16
the United States perform some variant of this al talón context. This draws attention to the
expectations of consumers of mariachi music, particularly among Mexicans and first generation
immigrant populations. The socio-cultural aspects of this performance context, including the
music skill-set utilized, is very often overlooked in formal classroom mariachi instruction by
teachers trained under the Western aesthetic in music education, many of whom have very little
experience or understanding of this framework. This oversight fuels a larger critique of formal
mariachi instruction by traditional professional practitioners who feel that the repertoire driven
context is the true representation of the art form and as such, should be a central focus of formal
classroom curriculum. Further complicating this issue, are the institutional bureaucracy of school
administrators and music teachers from the “trilogy” who, both unintentionally but in most cases
intentionally, undermine any teaching approach that violates the status quo in order to reinforce
the Western view of music learning.
In contrast the “show” mariachi is more indicative of the Western ideal performance
context usually positioned within the setting of a concert hall or theater evoking the more
subdued aesthetic. As with a classical music performance, the audience is passive and the
mariachi is given liberty to play repertoire of their own choosing rather than taking requests. The
performance focuses on more technical and virtuosic “show” pieces. Because the show mariachi
is not bound by active audience participation, musicians in this sub-style have a smaller
repertoire developing technical instrumental and vocal virtuosity, both as individuals and as an
ensemble. Show groups tend to perform more “specialty and novelty arrangements” showcasing
the musical strengths of the musicians. Correspondingly, a musical arranger, usually a musician
within the ensemble, creates written arrangements, and in some cases original compositions,
elevating the perceived prestige and legitimacy of a particular mariachi creating an elitist
Conceptualizing Mariachi p. 17
hierarchy not common among working groups, but representative of the modernist
metanarratives in Western music culture. The use of elaborate written arrangements also shifts
the traditional mode of transmission from oral to written. As I have argued, performance context
is not limited to physical space. A show mariachi, in addition to formal theater and concert hall
venues, performs in all types of settings from backyard parties to weddings and quinceañeras.54
What makes the “show”, so to speak, is the subdued and passive audience consuming a
performance that focuses on a high level of technical music skills and is dramatically more
entertaining. That is not to say that the audience is totally passive. There may be requests from
the audience, but the show mariachi is assumes no serious obligation to satisfy the expectation.
While on the other hand, the working mariachi has a very tenuous relationship with the client
where performance impetus is driven by audience requests, and cultural expectation. Failure to
navigate this expectation can result in a loss of clientele and a de-valuing of professional
credibility. The al talón mariachi rarely performs in a theater, however they still approach the
performance aesthetic from the perspective of audience determined repertoire. This is true even
if the group is being hired on a flat fee per hour versus by the song request. The defining
characteristic of this group is the audience determination of repertoire. A deeper understanding
of the practical complexities of mariachi performance and the inherent musical skills needed to
navigate the variable contexts is gained by looking at the differences between performance
contexts. Teaching mariachi requires a music teacher who can be “culturally responsive … to
find the ideal balance between the musical and socio-cultural dimensions of teaching.”55
Teaching Mariachi: Conflicting Narratives
In Mexico, mariachi ensembles are predominantly vocational. One learns to perform in a
54
55
The traditional celebration in many Latino cultures of young woman’s 15th birthday considered her entrance to young adulthood.
Abril, “Responding to Culture,” 89.
Conceptualizing Mariachi p. 18
mariachi in the same way one might learn a trade such as plumbing or carpentry. As such the
majority of mariachi ensembles are groups working in the al talón context. Learning to sing or
play an instrument is still through a “musical skills/concept,”56 however it is closely tied to the
socio-cultural context of repertoire knowledge. The emphasis is not always on developing
technical mastery, but on developing sufficient competency, to contribute to the collective
musical goals, both instrumentally and vocally. In many cases, a musician will be more
competent in one or the other. Violinists and trumpeters are expected to maintain a familiarity
and competence with more than one melodic part, allowing for interchange when substitute
and/or pick-up musicians are needed. Additionally musicians will pick-up a secondary
instrument within the ensemble. If you play in the armonía57 section, it is almost a certainty that
you will have some facility with one or more these instruments. Learning another instrument is
based on practicality, as a result of the performance context. Because the ensemble is small, any
absence by a group member may have an adverse effect on the group’s ability to work,
particularly when group members rely on a collective vocal repertoire maximizing the ability to
take requests. Ear playing and memorization are the foundational skills for mariachi
performance. Transposition skills and improvisation of “formulaic structures” are essential to
meet the expectations of the al talon context. A comprehensive study of all the musical, cultural
and socio-economic complexities of this style of work, is beyond the scope of this paper, suffice
to say that the typical majority of traditional working class Mexicanos performing mariachi
possess this socio-cultural orientation. The number of consumers of mariachi music with a
similar context-orientation is significant both in Mexico and the US, although smaller. Learning
and transmitting mariachi music in a working context relies heavily on a musician’s ability to
56
57
Ibid, 89.
The armonía encompasses specifically the vihuela and guitar players, however in certain contexts includes the guitarrón and harp as well.
Conceptualizing Mariachi p. 19
acquire and use skills normally marginalized in traditional Western music education. “Broadly
conceived, European-driven music making and musical training (especially in school
environments) tends to emphasize analytical symbolic decoding of notation as its primary
ultimate goal, whereas music traditions from other parts of the world allow for “aurality,”
“orality,” and kinesthesia to predominate musical skill transmission.”58 US Mariachi instruction,
particularly in Texas, teaches mariachi from a Western orientation.
The highest concentration of mariachi activity in secondary schools in Texas is located in
the Rio Grande Valley, San Antonio, El Paso, and the Dallas/Fort Worth metro area. Houston,
which has the third largest population of Hispanics in the United States, has a large professional
market of mariachi musicians, however the development student ensembles has been limited to a
handful of schools. Austin, Corpus Christi, Laredo, Del Rio, San Angelo, and Odessa have
mariachi student ensembles in a few schools. Among institutions of higher education, The
University of Texas system offers mariachi as a university sponsored ensemble on four of their
campuses, Austin San Antonio, Brownsville, and Pan American. Texas A & M offers mariachi in
College Station, San Antonio and Kingsville. The University of North Texas, Texas Tech, Texas
State and Our Lady of the Lake University offer mariachi ensemble courses as well, not to
mention the community colleges including Alamo, Del Mar, and Southwest Texas Jr. College in
Uvalde. Most mariachi ensemble courses do not count for credit towards a music degree or
teaching certification. Texas State and Our Lady of the Lake University are exceptions, both
offering music degrees with specializations in mariachi. However, full-time tenure-track faculty
with scholarly experience in mariachi, do not teach the courses.
Many mariachi teachers are not formally certified or even posses a post-secondary
58
Colley, “Educating Teachers,” 63.
Conceptualizing Mariachi p. 20
degree. However, a majority of Texas mariachi teachers are certified through music education
programs, that “as gatekeepers to the profession … generally reserve admittance to students
whose training in Western art music qualifies them to continue such pursuits.”59 “Given that
music teacher education programs by and large still reside in (or operate in partnership with)
schools of music modeled after the 19th-century European conservatory,”60 pre-service teachers
do not receive a “culturally based”61 orientation to teaching music. As such, the performance
context to teach mariachi is that of the “show mariachi”. Students learn limited repertoire
through written arrangements, focusing on “music skills/concepts”, and memorization through
repetition. Playing by ear, improvisation, and transposition are generally not conceived as
important. Curriculum for the most part centers on preparation for competitive events that
recognize student achievement by rank order, (1st, 2nd or 3rd place) including awards for best
violins, trumpets and/or vocals etc. The intensive focus on competition mimics the high stakes
testing culture in the core areas of education and excludes the socio-cultural diversity of ethnic
folk music. The modernist music hierarchy is re-imagined reinforcing ideas of elitism,
marginalization and exclusion. The socio-cultural importance of mariachi performance context is
ignored, with the show mariachi appropriated, at the exclusion of the working conext, to better
align the Western philosophy of music education. The opportunity is lost for students to learn a
more comprehensive understanding of culture and its role in music.
The recently organized Texas Association of Music Educators (TAME) provides a case
study within the movement to formalize mariachi instruction in Texas, highlighting a number of
issues raised in this article. As an officer of the Executive Committee, I have observed that to
59
60
61
Abril, “Responding to Culture,” 88.
Colley, “Educating Teachers,” 67
Abril, “Responding to Culture,” 89
Conceptualizing Mariachi p. 21
date the sole function of the organization is developing competitive events utilizing the Texas
Music Educators Association (TMEA) and the University Interscholastic League (UIL) as an
organizational model and path for credibility and legitimization within the existing state
framework for music education. Discussions have included the creation of a Prescribed Music
List, as is used by the University Interscholastic League (UIL) in order to standardize repertoire,
presumably utilizing written notated arrangements, and establishing certified adjudicators, from
the ranks of state certified music teachers who teach mariachi. While on the surface, these appear
as sound and valid pursuits, they also reaffirm modernist hegemonic structures and ideology. The
argument to assimilate to the existing paradigm for purposes of legitimization marginalizes and
excludes the historical socio-cultural contexts of mariachi performance, framing it firmly within
the Western tradition, reinforcing the modernist metanarratives of music education. Positioning
mariachi ensembles in formal music learning environments provides an opportunity to develop
and institute diverse teaching practices based “on aesthetic, educational, cultural, or artistic
grounds.”62 This opportunity is missed when the curricular focus is on assimilation and
achieving perceived legitimacy.
Summary, Interpretation, and Implications
Mariachi music in the last 25 years has risen in popularity in secondary schools, colleges
and universities. “Although alternative ensemble practices are gaining currency in the field,
teacher education programs – still driven by the National Association of Schools of Music
(NASM) guidelines – are slow to respond to this growing trend among professionals in the
field.”63 Formal mariachi instruction in US schools draws attention to the tension between
modernist domination of music education and a postmodern philosophical paradigm shift. This
62
63
Colley, “Educating Teachers,” 57.
Colley, “Educating Teachers,” 67
Conceptualizing Mariachi p. 22
includes teaching approaches that are culturally responsive. “Culturally responsive teaching is a
concept that has brought awareness of the need for teachers to be sensitive and responsive to the
cultures of their students.”64 Among mariachi teachers, issues of ownership, insider/outsider
status, and cultural legitimacy further complicate many of these issues. As more and more
mariachi students in secondary schools graduate, the need for updating university music
programs becomes more and more apparent. Clements and Campbell found that some
undergraduate music students felt a vast disconnection between what they were studying at the
university (Western classical) and their other musical worlds (popular musics).65 Some
undergraduates reported feeling tension and ‘outright hostility’ from professors when discussing
their ‘other’ musical interests.66 An increasing population of pre-service teachers desiring to
teach mariachi, or “other” music forms, may in some instances not receive the requisite
orientation and training to be culturally responsive. Consequently, they may inadvertently
reaffirm practices reflective of a modernist hegemony and a system of cultural appropriation,
marginalization and exclusion within music education.
Institutionalized mariachi instruction can be conceptualized as a Postmodern shift in
paradigm for teaching music to a more diverse and inclusive cultural approach. From the vantage
of mariachi pedagogy and further scholarship, formal instruction should include the “show
mariachi”, but also a diversity performance spaces so that the socio-cultural references are not
stripped from the tradition. Postmodern though informs a diverse view of the mariachi tradition
in all its manifestations. Mariachi ensembles become an environment where tolerance, respect
for diversity and de-stabilization of elitism and exclusion within the music discipline can be
64
65
Abril, “Responding to Culture,” 79.
Ann C. Clements, and Patricia Shehan Campbell. "Rap, Rock, Race, and Rhythm: Music and More in a Methods Class." The Mountain Lake
Reader (2006)
66
Ibid, 18.
Conceptualizing Mariachi p. 23
taught. The growing research on ethnicity, gender, and cultural identity enrich the complexities
of how mariachi is transmitted in formal spaces. More research in this area is needed to further
develop mariachi pedagogy. Analyzing and replicating music teaching and learning as it happens
naturally is imperative particularly with the advent of music technology, production, and
dissemination. A Postmodern music education will incorporate diverse ensembles with diverse
approaches to music learning and knowing. Mariachi ensembles in the formal music program,
provides the space for this continued development.
Conceptualizing Mariachi p. 24
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