Encyclopedia of Latin American Popular Music

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Encyclopedia of Latin American Popular Music Page 45

by George Torres


  crooners Frank Sinatra and Julio Iglesias. In order to compete with the modern

  trends, Mexican bolero composers modernized the genre by incorporating elements

  of rock ‘n’ roll. This new pop ballad genre came to be known as balada . Singers

  such as José José and Juan Gabriel defined balada’s golden era in the 1970s. In the

  following decade, the Mexican balada was largely absorbed into the international

  Latin pop category. Throughout the 1980s and 1990s most composers and song-

  writers drew from previously popular styles. Luis Miguel, a young Mexican pop

  star, was instrumental in reintroducing the romantic bolero to a new, transnational

  generation in the 1990s.

  The Rock ‘n’ Roll Era

  During the early 1960s rock ‘n’ roll became a major influence on Mexican poli-

  tics, society, and culture. Derived from an imported commodity, rock en español

  quickly established itself as an authentic local form of music in Mexico City.

  The rise of a massive student-led resistance, which revolted against authoritar-

  ian rule in 1968, linked rock ‘n’ roll with protest against the government. This

  countercultural movement, La Onda (The Wave, also known as La Onda Chi-

  cana ), emerged as a vehicle for resistance politics and as an outlet for alternative

  articulations of self and national identity among middle-class Mexican youths.

  Like elsewhere in Latin America, rock music was considered subversive and

  threatening by both the nationalist establishment on the right and the intellectual

  critics on the left. While critics condemned Mexican rock music as a bourgeois

  imitation of an imperialist cultural expression, rock artists and fans alike suffered

  harassment and abuse at the hands of the Mexican government and its police

  force. After the countercultural movement had lost momentum and most native

  rock bands had broken up, the genre was absorbed by the disempowered lower-

  class youths of the marginalized zones of urban Mexico. In the early 1980s, the

  punk-rock youth from the barrios ( los chavos banda ) made themselves heard

  with a music that addressed their needs and concerns. The 1980s also produced

  two other trends of native rock: the rock-fusion carried by the middle classes

  and the other rock, a commercialized and sanitized teenybopper rock movement.

  With the 1986 student protests, rock music (both foreign and national) experi-

  enced a revival.

  Mexico

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  257

  Música Grupera

  The onda grupera (literally the group wave) is a hybrid as well as transnational

  phenomenon. Inspired by the 1960s Mexican pop ballad/rock groups that imitated

  English and American rock music and the Colombian cumbia craze that swept

  Mexico in the early 1960s, the grupo (group) ensemble with its synthesized instru-

  ments, electric guitar, and lead vocalist emerged as one of Mexico’s commercially

  most successful forms of popular music in the 1980s. Grupos play easy-listening

  Mexican and international pop ballads as well as tropical cumbias (a typical Mexi-

  can style not to be confused with its Afro-Colombian source) and are characterized

  by a common-denominator bubblegum sound rather than a distinctive Mexican re-

  gional style or flavor. Due to a lack of access to the mainstream media as well as for

  economic survival in the local music market, the first generation of gruperos ( grupo

  musicians) in the 1970s developed a hybrid music style and mixed repertoire that

  borrowed from the balada pop tradition, cumbia tropical (tropical cumbia ), rock, and ranchera (Mexican country music) and that would mainly appeal to the lower

  classes. The pioneer groups hailed from anywhere between the southeastern pen-

  insula of Yucatán to Acapulco on the Pacific coast, but eventually Mexico’s north-

  east became the hub for the grupo movement. The phenomenon peaked in the early

  1990s when it became part of massive, Woodstock-style marathon dance concerts

  in major cities such as Monterrey, Nuevo León, and Guadalajara, Jalisco.

  Other Transnational Music Phenomena

  In the mid-1980s, a grupo version of the acoustic banda sinaloense appeared in

  Guadalajara. This fusion became known as tecnobanda ( technobanda) or simply

  banda (consisting of electric bass, keyboard synthesizer, saxophone, trumpets,

  drums, and vocalist). In the early 1990s, southern California was swept by the

  banda movement, carried and supported by large numbers of recent immigrants

  from Mexico and Central America. Tecnobanda’s accelerated tempo and powerful

  amplification set off a dance craze that spread to other parts of the United States and

  back to Mexico. After the Mexican media mogul Televisa discovered tecnobanda

  as a transnational marketable commodity, it soon entered the Mexican mainstream

  and opened the doors for other regional popular music forms. A decade after tec-

  nobanda’s international breakthrough, a local group that, like tecnobanda, fused

  Mexican rural-rooted music with synthesizers and drum sets, busted out of Chicago

  and made headlines in the United States when peaking the Billboard Latin charts in

  2003. The novelty sound became known as pasito duranguense (little step from Du-

  rango). Although the Durango groups mainly reinterpret Mexican standards such

  as rancheras and baladas, el pasito duranguense is a distinctly Chicago invention,

  and in the Mexican home state of Durango, it is consequently called Chicago sound.

  258 | Mexico

  Both the tecnobanda and the pasito duranguense phenomena owe much to the onda

  grupera, which paved the way in the music industry for keyboard-driven, eclectic

  youth music, yet rooted in Mexican sensibilities.

  Mexicanized Foreign Dance Music

  Various dance music imported from the Caribbean were popularized and Mexican-

  ized throughout the 20th century such as the Cuban danzón and the mambo . Cuban bandleader Pérez Prado ’ s work in Mexico in the 1950s made the mambo even more

  fashionable and local dance bands quickly integrated the new trend into their own

  repertories. This dance music is known in Mexico as música tropical (tropical music)

  or música bailable (danceable music), which also encompasses the cumbia, a genre

  that has been popular among Mexico’s dancing audiences since the 1960s. Mexican

  regional ensembles, from accordion-based groups to brass bands, joined the cumbia

  craze, popularizing the genre in urban and rural areas alike. Over time, cumbia music

  became more associated with Mexico’s lower and working classes. Instrumental in

  the development and dissemination of cumbia has been Monterrey, the center of a po-

  tent cultural industry promoting predominantly música norteña and música grupera.

  During the 1980s, Monterrey’s increasingly more professional recording and enter-

  tainment industries propelled the pop- influenced grupera music and grupo/norteño

  fusions out of their regional confines. By the early 1990s, commercial cumbias en-

  joyed prominence in the whole of Mexico as well as in parts of the United States.

  Apart from this heavily commercialized music, there exists a lesser-known regional

  style of cumbia, the Monterrey colombiana, which has remained more closely con-

  nected to the original musical style from the Caribbean coastal region of Colombia,

&n
bsp; in sound as well as in instrumentation (Olvera Gudiño 2005). Apart from cumbias,

  colombianos (Colombians) also reinterpreted other popular Colombian genres like

  porro and vallenato as an expression of their own rural origins and marginalization.

  In spite of the indifference and even open hostility of the local mass media, the music

  was able to transcend its marginal confines, and within two decades, it had spread to

  other cities of the Mexican northeast. The late 1990s saw an increasing acceptance

  of the Monterrey colombiana after the popular culture industry had discovered it as

  a potentially lucrative new musical style. Due to the increasing decentralization of

  Mexico’s culture industry and the proliferation of new channels of communication in

  the 1990s, popular genres such as the tropical cumbia began to be recorded outside

  of the established recording centers, both south and north of the border.

  Electronica

  In the beginning of the the 21st century, the nor-tec phenomenon emerged from the

  border city of Tijuana and, through the Internet, it quickly conquered a global audi-

  ence. Marketed as a kind of ethnic electronic dance music, nor-tec samples sounds

  Milonga

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  259

  of traditional music from northern Mexico and transforms them through computer

  technology used in European and American techno music and electronica.

  Further Reading

  Carrizosa, Toño. La Onda Grupera: Historia del Movimiento Grupero [The Grupo

  Wave: A History of the Grupo Movement]. Mexico City: EDAMEX, 1997.

  Madrid, Alejandro L. Nor-tec Rifa! Electronic Dance Music from Tijuana to the World.

  New York: Oxford University Press, 2008.

  Olvera Gudiño, José Juan. Colombianos en Monterrey: Origen de un gusto musical y

  su papel en la construcción de una identidad social. Monterrey, NL: Fondo Estatal para la

  Cultura y las Artes de Nuevo León, 2005.

  Pedelty, Mark. Musical Ritual in Mexico City: From the Aztec to NAFTA. Austin: Uni-

  versity of Texas Press, 2004.

  Simonett, Helena. Banda: Mexican Musical Life across Borders. Middletown, CT: Wes-

  leyan University Press, 2001.

  Zolov, Eric. Refried Elvis: The Rise of the Mexican Counterculture. Berkeley: Univer-

  sity of California Press, 1999.

  Helena Simonett

  Milonga

  An African-derived word native to the Río de la Plata region of Argentina and

  Uruguay, milonga can refer to a number of interrelated concepts: an improvisatory

  song form, of which exist distinct rural and urban versions; a lively couples dance

  played by tango ensembles; a social event where dancers gather to dance tango,

  vals , and milonga; and the location where such an event takes place.

  The precise etymology of the term milonga is unclear, although it is undoubt-

  edly Afro-Argentine in origin. Scholars have identified possible cognates in Kim-

  bundu and Ki-Kongo meaning word, argument, and moving lines of dancers. In

  any case, it is clear that the term came into use in River Plate Spanish in the mid-

  19th century; one of its first appearances in print is in José Hernández’s classic

  gauchesco poem “ Martín Fierro” in 1872. In this early period, the milonga in ques-

  tion was a song form for solo voice and guitar accompaniment, and was based

  on texts consisting of octosyllabic lines, frequently in the ten-line décima stanzas derived from popular Spanish poetry. These texts could be either pre-composed

  or improvised, and the milonga formed the rhythmic and musical basis for impro-

  vised song duels known as payadas or contrapuntos. Musically, these milongas were distinguished by a rhythmic base related to the habanera , sometimes simplified to the pattern known as tresillo in Cuba, known locally as a 3–3-2 rhythm, referring to the number of eighth note subdivisions in each of the three notes of

  the pattern.

  260 | Milonga

  In the 20th century, the milonga was given new prominence by the urban folk-

  lore boom, becoming a vehicle for populist folk poetry by musicians such as Ata-

  hualpa Yupanqui (1908–1992). A distinctly urban milonga emerged in both

  instrumental and vocal versions among tango musicians starting in the 1930s with

  important milongas by composer Sebastian Piana (1903–1994) such as “ Milonga

  triste ” and “ Milonga sentimental.” Frequently these pieces were in livelier tem-

  pos than the folkloric versions, and were danced, like the tango, by embracing

  couples. Many important tango composers also wrote milongas, including notable

  contributions by Anibal Troilo (1914–1975; “La tablada,” “La trampera”), Pedro

  Laurenz (1902–1972; “Milonga de mis amores”), and Julián Plaza (1928–2003;

  “Nocturna”). Among the proponents of urban sung milongas, guitarist and singer

  Edmundo Rivero (1911–1986) was particularly well-known for an oeuvre rich in

  a nearly archaic version of lunfardo, the underworld slang of Buenos Aires, which

  frequently deals with criminal themes. Tango nuevo composer Astor Piazzolla

  (1921–1992) also wrote both instrumental and sung milongas, including the well-

  known “Milonga del angel” in the former case, and “Jacinto chiclana” in the latter,

  to a text by Jorge Luis Borges (1899–1986).

  Milonga as a specific dance form, rather than a general term for a social gath-

  ering involving dance, was strongly influenced by the choreography of the Afro-

  rioplatense candombe. In fact, early commentators suggested that milonga prior

  to the turn of the 20th century was nothing other than compadritos (European-

  descended lower-class urban men) copying the steps they had witnessed in the can-

  dombe. Over the course of the 20th century, the milonga became a lively, playful

  dance where dancers maintain a more constant motion than in tango, occasionally

  dancing in rhythmic counterpoint to the musical phrase rather than in rhythmic

  unison with it.

  The term milonga as referring to the event or locale for such dancing also gen-

  erated two related terms: milonguero, a person who dances tango and milonga in such locales, and milonguita, a working-class woman whose skill in dancing made

  her a popular partner for bourgeois men and an object of their desires. The milon-

  guita becomes a literary trope in tango lyrics; she is typically originally naïve, but

  the limited options offered by her station in life lead her into whirlwind, inevita-

  bly fatalistic romances with the playboys who romance her. Usually in these nar-

  ratives the only true freedom the milonguita is afforded is to betray and abandon

  these men.

  Further Reading

  Collier, Simon. “The Tango is Born: 1880s–1920s.” In Tango! The Dance, The Song,

  The Story, edited by Simon Collier. London: Thames and Hudson, 1995.

  Savigliano, Marta. Tango and the Political Economy of Passion . Boulder, CO: West-

  view Press, 1995.

  Mizik

  Rasin

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  261

  Thompson, Robert Farris. Tango: The Art History of Love. New York: Pantheon Books.

  2005.

  Michael O’Brien

  Mizik Rasin

  Mizik rasin is a roots music that emerged in the 1980s, which brought traditional

  Afro-Haitian music, especially the music of rara (Haitian Carnival music) and

  Vodou, together with popular music. T
he movement was influenced, in large part,

  by reggae . Besides having its texts in Creole the music was heavily influenced by Haitian Vodou, to the point where musicians would incorporate instruments and

  rhythms of Vodou ceremonies, often going directly to the practitioners of Vodou

  ceremonies to receive legitimate instruction. Because roots music that is Vodou-

  influenced was suppressed during the reigns of the two Duvaliers, Papa Doc and

  Baby Doc, the movement did not surface until after 1987, though the formations

  of the movement date from before then.

  Early attempts at unifying traditional music and popular music in Haiti existed

  prior to mizik rasin. Groups such as Jazz de Jeunes either attempted a stylistic in-

  terpretation of Vodou rhythms and themes, or would entitle their songs with names

  or deities from Vodou. Prior to the end of the Duvalier regime, Afro-Haitian music

  (i.e., Vodou and rara ) was seen by the much of the dominant population (Haitian

  government, elites, and the Catholic church) as an undesirable cultural element,

  and so allusions and references to Haitian Vodou were frowned upon by the these

  civic and social groups. During this kilti libete (freedom culture) movement of the

  1970s, much of which existed in exile as a result of the Haitian brain drain when

  many intellectuals left Haiti because of the repressive Duvalier era, many artists

  influenced by the works of groups like Jazz de Jeunes began to experiment with

  a more serious and methodical appropriation of Afro-Haitian music and dance.

  It was on the heels of this period that misik rasin came about, and, within Haiti,

  musicians followed their inspiration to the lakou (ceremonial Vodou compounds

  or communities), where musicians learned the authentic practices of Vodou music

  and dance. When the Duvalier regime finally imploded, the musicians were free

  to come out of artistic exile, both at home and abroad, with their musical style.

  What resulted was what Gerdès Fleurent has called a bi-musicality where musi-

  cians were trained in both Western and Afro-Haitian styles of music composition

  and performance.

  Notable examples of

  mizik rasin

  artists include

  Boukman Eksperyans,

 

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