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Introduction: Mariachi Studies and Making the Intangible Tangible
Academic studies of mariachi have grown in quantity and sophistication, based on contributions from MexicoFootnote 1 and the proliferation of English-language scholarship in terms of theses and dissertationsFootnote 2 and articles, book chapters, and monographs.Footnote 3 Generally speaking, and quite understandably, the focus of most of this academic work has been on mariachi as a genre, its history, innovations, styles, musicians, and groups, as well as the ways in which particular cities (and their festivals, in say Tucson, San Antonio, San Diego, Albuquerque, Rosarito, and Tecalitlán) (Reference HipplerHippler, 1969; Reference ClarkClark, 1980; Reference Fogelquist and PetersonFogelquist, 1996, Reference Fogelquist, Titan and Carlin2002; Reference RodríguezRodríguez, 2000) have helped foster its growth and enduring popularity, especially as one form of cultural appreciation and identity for young Mexican-Americans. In fact, many American states, especially in the Southwest, offer mariachi programs at the middle school, high school, and even college/university levels (Reference MonaghanMonaghan, 2007; Reference SalazarSalazar, 2011; NBC News, 2012; Reference RickettsRicketts, 2013; Reference Gradante and KuGradante, 2015; Reference Pedroza and MoorePedroza, 2017; Reference GuerraGuerra, 2021; Reference BallíBallí, 2022).
Mariachi studies, it can be argued, is an inherently interdisciplinary subfield, and many of its researchers, again not surprisingly, have arisen from music and ethnomusicology departments, especially in the United States. In preparing for this Element, I originally had a more thoroughly historiographical goal: to offer a very brief history of mariachi and then survey some of the ways in which particular players, and especially scholars, have contributed to this growing field. It soon became evident, though, that this goal would be unrealistic in scope and better served by others who are more embedded in this milieu, in particular the numerous scholar-musicians (e.g., Mark Fogelquist, Jonathan Clark, Daniel Sheehy, Jeff Nevin, and Russell Rodríguez) who have lived and written about such history, in both English and Spanish. Like many (though certainly not all) American researchers of mariachi, I approach the topic as a non-Hispanic white man who has developed a sustained personal and academic interest in the music and its rich culture and stakeholders. My own training – in philosophy, history, religious studies, and information studies – is likewise interdisciplinary, and I feel that this relatively “outsider” status (i.e., to both the genre and ethnomusicology) positions me to observe and analyze in ways that are perhaps unorthodox yet interdisciplinary and productive for mariachi studies moving forward.
Despite the inherent interdisciplinarity of a field such as ethnomusicology, the academic study of mariachi has ample room to grow as it begins to shift attention away from mariachi history, evolutions, major players, and practices, and toward other subjects. In 2011, UNESCO included mariachi music on its list of expressions of intangible cultural heritage for humanity. While it is undoubtedly true that mariachi is in many ways intangible, this downplays some of the ways in which mariachi culture has been expressed as well as the work of mariachi scholars in documenting and preserving this history, not to mention the tangible ways in which festivals, secondary schools, and institutions of higher learning support and promote mariachi studies (see, e.g., Reference González and KuGonzález, 2015; Reference Hernández, Arroyo, Jimenez, Angel and Clark.Hernández et al., 2022).
Reference Schippers, Pettan and TitonHuib Schippers (2015) has written powerfully on the connections between applied ethnomusicology, intangible heritage, interdisciplinarity, musical ecosystems, and sustainability. “While many archiving efforts, recording projects, festivals, and even the highly visible Masterpieces of Intangible Cultural Heritage initiatives of UNESCO still seem to approach music genres as artifacts rather than organisms,” Schippers notes, “there is increasing consensus that a dynamic approach to processes of music sustainability and change is imperative” (Reference Schippers, Pettan and Titon2015, p. 136; see also Reference Schippers and Grant.Schippers & Grant, 2016). The question of how, why, when, and who should be involved in making the intangible tangible, documented, preserved, and protected is of course highly political and engenders questions of power, privilege, authority, colonialism, and heteronormativity, among others. In the case of mariachi studies, this is all the more the case because, again, many of the major academic and professional players are white Americans rather than Mexican nationals or Mexican Americans.Footnote 4 As Lechuga and Schmidt observed, “People like Jeff Nevin who has offered the first mariachi degree in the world, Mark Fogelquist who has been one of the greatest mariachi educators, and Jonathan Clark, a well-known mariachi historian, are some of the big names in the mariachi world, and they are all White” (Reference Schmidt and Smith2017, p. 89). In a similar vein, Campbell and Flores have observed, “While cultural meaning of mariachi music undoubtedly originates as Mexican, one can find people of all cultures and backgrounds desiring to learn how to play this music, a remarkable number of whom are not of Mexican heritage” (Reference Campbell, Flores, Schippers and Grant2016, p. 274). Daniel Sheehy explained it as follows in his book Mariachi Music in America: “… oftentimes over the years, someone from our audience would come up to me and say something such as ‘You don’t look Mexican.’ This simple comment, repeated hundreds of times, along with many insightful, cross-cultural encounters with Mexican musicians, made me acutely aware of the social dimension of mariachi music” (Reference Sheehy2006, p. 8). “Why, I would ask myself, would audiences not likely tell Chinese cellist Yo-Yo Ma ‘You don’t look German’ when he plays the baroque music of Bach,” he asked, “but they would tell me ‘You don’t look Mexican’ when I played mariachi music? What was different? Why was one music so racialized and the other not?” (Reference Sheehy2006, p. 8). These sorts of ethnomusical, cultural, and sociological realities, and the larger forces involved in what may be regarded as the “Americanization” of mariachi, have been acknowledged by Mexicans, including well-known mariachis, such as Rubén Fuentes (1926–2022) of the famed group Mariachi Vargas de Tecalitlán. When asked in 2008 about the popularity and success of mariachi education programs in the US, Fuentes remarked: “It just makes me sad that here in Mexico we don’t copy them.” He explained, “When we see how the music is so accepted in the United States, how they have mariachi classes in schools, and they even receive degrees in mariachi, it makes me a little jealous that they haven’t done the same thing here [in Mexico]” (Reference FuentesFuentes, 2008).
This Element aims to contribute to the interdisciplinary studies of mariachi music and culture by giving attention to two areas that have thus far received little academic attention: philanthropy and museum studies. Methodologically, I rely heavily on oral history, ethnography, and archival research. The first section considers the role of mariachi philanthropy through a case study of Edward E. Marsh, an American in Mexico. Marsh is a lifelong mariachi enthusiast and collector who has become a major financial supporter of festivals, educational programs, and arts and culture over the last decade. No previous academic work has given substantial attention to Marsh and his influence, and this section helps fill a lacuna and documents some of the ways in which Mexican and American culture, music, philanthropy, and education have intersected with recent mariachi history. I interviewed Marsh on numerous occasions over the course of three years at his home in Rosarito, Mexico, and this section makes use of highlights from this oral historical data. Marsh is compared and contrasted with another American supporter of Mexican music, the late Chris Strachwitz (1931–2023) of the Arhoolie Foundation. The second section examines the first museum/exhibit in the United States dedicated to mariachi history and culture – curated by scholar-musician Jeff Nevin of the Mariachi Scholarship Foundation and, as of this writing, housed at his academic institution, Southwestern College in Chula Vista, California. This section includes ethnographic observations of the Southwestern College mariachi exhibit based on an extensive tour with Nevin in early 2023. Nevin’s role at Southwestern College is introduced, and Southwestern is analyzed as one pioneering force in mariachi studies within higher education. The final section proposes some open areas for research in mariachi studies, particularly topics that would continue to push the interdisciplinary boundaries of this emerging subfield to include even more perspectives, methodologies, and disciplines. I also give historiographical attention to developments in mariachi studies, especially expressions within academia, again with an emphasis on the United States. Finally, three appendices are provided that I hope will serve as resource guides for students and researchers of mariachi: a timeline of mariachi studies and higher education over the last six decades, a chart that lists academic programs within American states (originally created by Jeff Nevin for the Mariachi Scholarship Foundation’s exhibit at Southwestern College), and a listing of some relevant archival and digital collections in the United States.
1 Chris Strachwitz, Edward E. Marsh, Collecting, Philanthropy, and Innovation
The academic study of material, organizational, and philanthropic support for mariachi is one area that would benefit from an interdisciplinary perspective and help fill a lacuna in the secondary literature. Although mariachi studies has certainly benefited from the work of collecting and especially philanthropy, as will be explored more in the following section on museum studies, its role and players have yet to be acknowledged or examined in great detail in the scholarly literature. There has been, to be sure, public support for mariachi programs in middle schools, high schools, and universities, as well as governmental and nonprofit sources of support for mariachi and its academic study.
One such example is the nonprofit Arhoolie Foundation, founded by Chris Strachwitz (1931–2023) (Reference Gosling and SimonGosling & Simon, 2013; Smithsonian Reference FolkwaysFolkways, 2022; Reference TraubTraub, 2023) (see Figure 1). In partnership with the UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center, the Strachwitz Frontera Collection of Mexican and Mexican American Recordings at UCLA Library works to preserve and digitize holdings, including those related to mariachi (Reference Folkways2022). In 2012, UCLA’s Chicano Studies Research Center Press published The Arhoolie Foundation’s Strachwitz Frontera Collection of Mexican and Mexican American Recordings (Reference Gurza, Clark and StrachwitzGurza, Clark, & Strachwitz, 2012). Strachwitz was also the force behind Arhoolie Records, founded in 1960 and acquired in 2016 by Smithsonian Folkways Recordings (Arhoolie Foundation, 2024). Arhoolie Records released, for instance, the “Mexico’s Pioneer Mariachis” albums (see, e.g., Reference ClarkClark, 1992–1998). For many years, Smithsonian Folkways Recordings was directed and curated by Daniel E. Sheehy, a professional mariachi musician (Mariachi Los Amigos) and ethnomusicologist who authored Mariachi Music in America for Oxford University Press’ series on Experiencing Music, Expressing Culture (2006). Sheehy is a past director of Folk & Traditional Arts for the National Endowment for the Arts in the US (Smithsonian Global, n.d.). He was also a recipient, in 2015, of the National Endowment for the Arts’ prestigious National Heritage Fellowship (Smithsonian Global, n.d.), an honor previously bestowed upon Natividad “Nati” Cano (1933–2014) of the famed Mariachi los Camperos in 1990 (National Endowment for the Arts, 2023).
Strachwitz, too, received a National Heritage Fellowship, in 2000. The most relevant academic work that acknowledges his collecting and philanthropy, which extended beyond mariachi music, is the aforementioned The Arhoolie Foundation’s Strachwitz Frontera Collection of Mexican and Mexican American Recordings from 2012. This resource includes a chapter entitled “Chris Strachwitz: The Making of a Music Man in America” (2012, pp. 12–19). Strachwitz’s immense contributions as a collector are mentioned elsewhere in the volume. The Frontera Collection at UCLA, we read, for instance, was “compiled over more than half a century by renowned collector Chris Strachwitz” (2012, p. 7). Strachwitz, a German immigrant, came to develop a love and appreciation for all varieties of music, including American and Mexican genres. The chapter on Strachwitz is notable for how its author, journalist Agustín Gurza, writes about the man and his support with an eye toward explaining how and why someone with white (i.e., European) ancestry could become a major supporter of Mexican and Mexican-American music. “Behind Strachwitz’s academic accomplishment,” Gurza tells us, “there lies the personal story of how a tall, blue-eyed descendent of European nobility came to be the champion of a humble strain of Mexican music ignored by most Americans and disdained by many upper-crust and middle-class Mexicans” (Reference Gurza, Clark and Strachwitz2012, p. 13). “The Strachwitz saga,” we read, “is one of fearless immersion in a gritty folk culture that was as foreign to his own upbringing as the Sonoran desert is to the Swiss Alps” (Reference Gurza, Clark and Strachwitz2012, p. 13). His commercial success is presented as a rags-to-riches narrative (with a “humble, homespun business” [2012, p. 19]). Strachwitz is depicted as hardworking and fair in his work at Arhoolie Records, again in a way that refers to his background: “His straight dealing in money matters helped nurture trust among some ethnic artists who were understandably skeptical of a white businessman asking them to sign on the dotted line. But artists also instinctively had faith in his intentions, because he communicated such genuine enthusiasm and respect for their marginalized music” (2012, p. 18).
Strachwitz, however, is primarily understood to be a records professional, collector, and preservationist more than a philanthropist, and his musical interests extend far beyond mariachi.Footnote 5 There has been precious little in the academic literature on mariachi philanthropy, aside from treatments of mariachi festivals, concerts, and associated fundraising (see, e.g., Reference Fogelquist and PetersonFogelquist, 1996; Reference RodríguezRodríguez, 2000; Reference SalazarSalazar, 2011). Lilya Reference WagnerWagner (2004) has written about fundraising and distinguishes between external and internal culture. “There is the external culture,” Wagner notes, “which is exhibited in outward behaviors and traditions that are readily discernible, such as a mariachi band performance.” “Internal culture,” on the other hand, she argues, “is less evident because it involves the way people think about situations and conceptualize information” (Reference Wagner2004, pp. 6–7). Successful fundraising arguably requires one to appreciate both forms of culture, which can also be considered in light of the tangible/intangible binary, and in the process can lead one to adopt an empathetic mindset that appreciates a culture on its own terms.
But what about the role of philanthropy? In the case of mariachi, American Edward E. Marsh (1951–) illustrates how an apparent “outsider” to Mexican culture and music has in recent years become one of its biggest financial and artistic supporters, someone who has worked to apprehend mariachi’s internal as well as external cultural expressions. Like Strachwitz, Marsh is white, a “gringo” to Mexicans, but has established a reputation as both a collector and philanthropist, donating millions of US dollars toward concerts, festivals, and mariachi education, in both Mexico and the US. Unlike Strachwitz, who collected widely across genres, Marsh has been far more focused on mariachi. And, unlike Strachwitz, Marsh has received virtually no attention in the academic literature, although his support of mariachi has been documented by journalists (e.g., Reference DuránDurán, 2015; SDSU, 2015; Reference DrakeDrake, 2018; Reference MijaresMijares, 2022; Reference MendozaMendoza, 2022) and he is known among professional mariachis due to the concerts he has organized and promoted. These include performances that feature Mariachi Vargas, Mariachi Nuevo Tecalitlán, Mariachi Los Camperos, and the Mariachi Divas (Marsh Reference LibraryLibrary, 2013, Reference Library2014; Marsh Reference ProductionsProductions, 2015; see Figure 2). Marsh’s relative invisibility once again speaks to the sense in which mariachi music may be regarded as “marginalized music” (2012, p. 18), as Gurza put it, but also, perhaps, the ways in which Marsh has privileged live musical experiences over self-promotion or concern about recognition in academic circles.
Marsh made his fortune in the real estate industry in the United States before retiring and focusing on other interests, such as collecting science fiction. He has been an active member of the Church of Scientology for over fifty years and is an admirer of the twentieth century “Golden Age of Science Fiction,” which included Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard (1911–1986). Marsh’s private collection of science fiction is extensive and he has donated substantial portions of its holdings, worth millions of US dollars, to his alma mater San Diego State University, which houses them in the eponymous Edward E. Marsh Golden Age of Science Fiction Reading Room (SDSU, 2013; Reference WestbrookWestbrook, 2022, p. 35). In fact, it was in the context of my own religious studies research that I first crossed paths with Marsh, including visits to his private Marsh Library, in Rosarito, Mexico, where he has been based for many years. When I first visited Marsh in Rosarito, some ten years ago, I was surprised to discover an abundance of mariachi albums, instruments, paintings, and sculptures, in addition to the science fiction and Scientology materials. A hallway in the lower level of his condominium struck me as tantamount to a mariachi house museum, lined with signed album covers and instruments from luminaries of the genre – Rubén Fuentes, José “Pepe” Martínez, Steeven Sandoval, and so many others.
Over the years, through dozens of conversations, formal interviews, and a review of personal and archival documents, I pieced together Marsh’s story of how and why he came to love and support mariachi, first as a collector and then as a philanthropist and concert promoter. Marsh’s love for Mexico and Mexican culture goes back to childhood. He was born in San Francisco in 1951, grew up in San Diego, and often visited Mexico, especially Rosarito, on family trips. Marsh likes to say that he was practically “hecho en Mexico” (made in Mexico) since his parents went on their honeymoon at the Rosarito Beach Hotel. His evolution from mariachi fan to philanthropist was gradual. It came as the result of friendships and networking with Rosarito politicians and community groups in the early 2010s, especially the Boys & Girls Club of Rosarito. “Rosy Torres, the club president, is a good friend,” Marsh explained, “and she works tirelessly for the children, and the club was the first sponsor, along with the Rosarito Beach Hotel, of a mariachi festival even before I became involved.” This festival took place in October 2010 and it was there that Marsh met Hugo Torres, then the mayor of Rosarito. “That festival was an amazing creation and inspired me and so many others to action.”
Marsh’s support of the Boys & Girls Club of Rosarito led to financial support of mariachi events, concerts, and donations of musical instruments to children. In 2013, he sponsored Mariachi Vargas, arguably the world’s most well-known and well-respected mariachi group, to perform a concert in Rosarito. The show also featured the Mariachi Divas de Cindy Shea and was billed as “Vargas’ First Appearance in Rosarito.” Marsh Reference LibraryLibrary (2013) produced a DVD of the event, including footage of its press conference, welcome party, and student workshops.
One of the attendees and guests of honor at this Reference Library2013 concert was Gil Sperry, another American mariachi enthusiast (Reference MannaManna, 2010). Sperry is the author of the books Mariachi for Gringos (Reference Sheehy2006) and Mariachi for Gringos II (Reference Sperry2011), both of which introduce lay American audiences to the history and culture of mariachi as well as classic songs (with the Spanish lyrics helpfully translated into English). Mariachi for Gringos II even includes a section entitled “Interviews with Gringos for Mariachi,” featuring Cindy Shea, Jeff Nevin, Mark Fogelquist, and Jonathan Clark, among others (Reference SperrySperry, 2011, pp. 109–87).
Sperry, it turned out, would significantly influence Marsh, planting the seeds for the latter’s more substantial – and innovative – support of mariachi. According to Marsh:
[Sperry] played a recording for me of the most famous mariachi group [Mariachi Vargas] accompanied by a full symphony orchestra. The music affected me deeply, more than Jimi Hendrix, George Gershwin, Danny Elfman, or even Henry Mancini. I knew and actually felt that my life would never be the same again. I knew I had to experience it myself LIVE. But I figured the experience must be preserved and shared with loved ones and the entire world. After research, I found the only way I could accomplish this dream was to produce it myself. I called the dream “The Big Concert.”
Overcome with the grandeur of combining more “traditional” mariachi music with a symphony orchestra set Marsh down a multi-year path. “The idea blossomed as others heard of this and confessed they too shared the dream,” as Marsh put it, and he even commissioned a mural, by Rosarito artist David Silvah, that captured his vision for “The Big Concert.” Marsh’s vision came to life on December 12, Reference Marsh2015, at the Baja California Center in Rosarito, with 5,000 attendees and an additional 500 VIP guests. The orchestra, he said, was “specially composed of hand-picked Mexicans and American professional symphony musicians, all led by the famous Querétaro Philharmonic Orchestra conductor, Maestro José Guadalupe Flores.” The “Big Concert” was also intended to foster Mexican–American relations, which “has been suffering for too many years,” according to Marsh. He invited everyone he could to the event and posted a YouTube video explaining more about his motivations. In the video, Marsh expressed his admiration for Mariachi Vargas and shared his discovery that the group “plays with a giant symphony orchestra every ten years or so,” and that his concert in Rosarito would allow this rarity to be shared with a large audience (Reference MarshMarsh, 2015).Footnote 6 “So I want to personally invite you,” Marsh went on in the video invitation, “my friends, my American friends, my Mexican friends, to come to this world premiere of El Gran Concierto del Mariachi, its performance, as a show, with Mariachi Vargas de Tecalitlán con orchestra [with orchestra], handpicked by the best conductor of mariachi orchestras in the world [José Guadalupe Flores] and colorized with fantastic ballet folklórico dancers to accent” (Reference MarshMarsh, 2015).
Marsh’s media company, Marsh Productions, recorded the concert and spent considerable time, energy, finance, and staff hours in editing and production (the concert is available on CD, DVD, and Blu-ray) (Marsh Reference ProductionsProductions, 2015, Reference Productions2016, Reference Productions2022a, Reference Productions2022b; IMDb, 2016). To say the event was a labor of love for Marsh would be an understatement. “It was a thrilling experience to attend and experience ‘The Big Concert,’ even if I had to produce it myself!” Marsh shared. “And,” he confessed, “it was not without costs: a lovely marriage of 14 years, a million and a half bucks, and constant snickers and outrageous price tags from literally every quarter even remotely involved. That’s quite a trick when you’ve never produced a concert before, never produced a music CD or DVD, and can’t even speak Spanish!”
Despite the personal and financial costs, the concert’s success earned him recognition and respect among mariachis and enthusiasts. Marsh’s “Big Concert” later aired on KPBS TV in southern California (Reference Marsh2021a) and was submitted to the Recording Academy in consideration for Grammy and Latin Grammy Awards (it was not formally nominated, however). Most validating and personally meaningful to Marsh was the praise from mariachi luminary and former Mariachi Vargas director Rubén Fuentes, who attended the concert as his guest of honor. According to Marsh, Fuentes remarked that “this is the greatest mariachi concert of all time.”Footnote 7 Gabriel Aguilar, formerly director of the Silvestre Vargas Museum in Tecalitlán, echoed this sentiment in a private message to Marsh shared with me: El Gran Concierto was, to Aguilar, “the best mariachi concert in the world” and the museum director from Tecalitlán thanked him for a “great gift to the world of mariachi music.”Footnote 8 Proceeds from the 2015 concert were donated to benefit several charitable causes, such as San Diego State University’s Love Library, the Boys & Girls Club of Rosarito, and youth orchestra programs in Baja and Querétaro (SDSU, 2015).
The full Reference Marsh2015 concert is now available online and has gathered over 1.3 million views as of early 2024 (Reference MarshMarsh, 2021b). Marsh has supported other mariachi projects in the intervening years, including concerts and festivals in Rosarito and Tecalitlán. Another highlight for Marsh came in October 2019 with the 10th International Mariachi Festival in Rosarito, which featured a “Mariachi All Stars” lineup that included Pepe Martínez, Jr., Steeven Sandoval, Miguel Angel Barron, Beto Alfaro, Victor Cardenas Garcia (“Pato”), Julio Martínez, Jeff Nevin, and the Ticuán Dance Company, with José Ronstadt (related to the famed Linda Ronstadt)Footnote 9 serving as master of ceremonies. The concert made use of an innovative technique that Marsh devised in which mariachis perform live but with a prerecorded symphony orchestra playing in the background and projected on a large screen – a “MagiConcert Virtual Orchestra” (2018; see Video Example 1).Footnote 10 This dual technique was also used in an October 2018 concert in Rosarito that benefited the Boys & Girls Club and featured, among others, the Mariachi Divas (Reference MarshMarsh, 2018a) and Trio Ellas (Reference MarshMarsh, 2018b). The well-known Mariachi Nuevo Tecalitlán has also utilized this technique (Canal 4 Zapotlan, 2022). Marsh’s vision is that this “MagiConcert Virtual Orchestra” will allow mariachi groups to recreate the sound and experience of his Reference Marsh2015 El Gran Concierto (i.e., combining traditional mariachi with a symphony orchestra) but in a way that is convenient and scalable, given the logistics, costs, and venue limitations. Marsh arguably turned out to be ahead of his time, given the manifold possible uses of such a MagiConcert Virtual Orchestra in an increasingly digital age. This is especially true in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic and the shift toward remote performance on platforms such as Zoom and Webex – not to mention the possible creative uses of such technology in conjunction with artificial intelligence.
More recently, Marsh has generously supported the Mariachi Scholarship Foundation in San Diego and their mariachi exhibit at Southwestern College – the first of its kind in the United States – which is analyzed as a case study in the following section. Marsh has also donated generously to the collections and maintenance of the Silvestre Vargas Museum in Tecalitlán (Reference AguilarAguilar, 2020),Footnote 11 a modern birthplace of mariachi, and provided instruments to a public school mariachi program in the same Mexican city (Reference MarshMarsh, 2019). Mariachi Vargas’ music director, Carlos Martínez, attended the award ceremony at the school and reminded the young, budding mariachi students of the importance of their small city to music history and the world’s perception of Mexico and Mexican culture. “I am convinced that from this school will come many future members of the best mariachi in the world,” Martínez said to the audience. “Those of you who live here might not fathom the importance of Tecalitlán,” he went on. “This is the land of the best mariachi in the world, and Mariachi Vargas de Tecalitlán represents Mexico worldwide. And we honor that responsibility and all our bandmasters. We have had the opportunity to represent you in Switzerland, Japan, Italy, China, all of Europe, South America, Argentina, and many other parts of the world” (Reference MarshMarsh, 2019).
In recognition of his philanthropy and support of mariachi, Marsh received a proclamation from the City of Tecalitlán that referred to him as a “distinguished son” (Reference MarshMarsh, 2019; Reference SebastianSebastian, 2022). In October 2022, Tecalitlán honored him yet again by unveiling a street named in his honor (Paseo Cultural Edward Marsh) (Reference SebastianSebastian, 2022). The road intersects with José “Pepe” Martínez Street (named after the famed musician and leader of Mariachi Vargas) in the Town Square. Marsh, like Strachwitz before him, has managed to earn a name for himself as an American supporter of Mexican music and culture. Indeed, American collectors and philanthropists such as Marsh and Strachwitz, as well as American mariachis and scholars such as Nevin, Clark, Sheehy, and others are not merely admirers, supporters, and practitioners but are actively working to preserve and promote mariachi as a form of art and culture for Mexicans and Americans alike. Their efforts therefore merit even more attention among scholars of mariachi, collections, and philanthropy.
2 Mariachi Scholarship Foundation Exhibit, Southwestern College
The intersection of mariachi studies and museum studies is another example in which scholars of mariachi can expand their disciplinary scope and benefit from analysis beyond the more typical focus on particular groups, performers, styles, and performances. As of Reference Spectacular2024, there are only two major museum centers for mariachi in the world: the Silvestre Vargas Museum in Tecalitlán, Mexico, and an exhibit managed by the Mariachi Scholarship Foundation on display at Southwestern College in Chula Vista, California.Footnote 12 This section analyzes the mariachi exhibit housed at Southwestern College’s library based on a visit and extended tour in early 2023 with curator, educator, and professional mariachi and classical trumpet player Dr. Jeff Nevin. My analysis is based on an approach rooted in museum studies and library and information science (see, e.g., Reference Tucker and LeavyTucker, 2020) as well as ethnography, participant observation, and oral history (see, e.g., Reference JorgensenJorgensen, 1989), including a formal interview conducted with Nevin in his office at Southwestern College that yielded useful background and context.
Nevin’s work at Southwestern College is well-known and respected in mariachi circles – among students, academics, and mariachi performers alike (The Sun, 2014; Reference Deleon-TorresDeleon-Torres, 2021). Southwestern College is by no means the only American institution of higher learning to promote mariachi studies and performance. The University of California at Los Angeles, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley,Footnote 13 UC Davis, Cal State Los Angeles, Fresno State, Stanford University, San José State University, University of the Pacific, Our Lady of the Lake University (San Antonio), University of Texas at Austin, Texas State University, University of Houston, University of Arizona, and Arizona State University, among others, have offered, and in many cases continue to provide, mariachi related coursework and band options to students. However, as noted in a 2007 article on Nevin in The Chronicle of Higher Education entitled “El Profesor de Mariachi,” Southwestern College holds the distinction of being the first American college to offer a “degree in mariachi performance, history, and culture” (Reference MonaghanMonaghan, 2007). According to the Southwestern website, students can pursue an Associate’s degree in Music – Mariachi Specialization (Southwestern College, 2023a). This mariachi specialization is described in the academic catalog as follows: “Each mariachi major must declare and take courses on a primary instrument (guitar, vihuela, guitarrón, harp, violin, trumpet, flute, voice), as well as courses on secondary instruments. Includes theory, keyboarding, and sight reading skills” (2023a). Southwestern has its own band, directed by Nevin (Mariachi Garibaldi; Reference YurViewYurView, 2022), and student learning outcomes for the specialization emphasize the ability to sing and play music – “including all of the standard mariachi song-types: son jalisciense, huapango, ranchera, bolero, son jarocho and joropo” – as well as the importance of understanding “mariachi history, style and performance practices” (Southwestern College, 2023a). The core course on mariachi history is Music 202, “Development of Mariachi: Style and Culture,” taught by Nevin and based on his Virtuoso Mariachi (Reference Nevin2002) and other resources.
Southwestern’s latest contribution to mariachi studies came in July 2022 with the opening of the Ed Marsh Mariachi Museum Exhibit (Reference MijaresMijares, 2022), located on the third (top) floor of the college library. The exhibit, entitled “Mariachi: Historia, Estrellas, Leyendas” (Mariachi: History, Stars, Legends), was made possible by support from Marsh, the Mariachi Scholarship Foundation (which Nevin serves as president), and the San Diego Commission for Arts and Culture. A magazine distributed at the grand opening described the exhibit as centered on “the History that breathes life into mariachi: the origin of the word, the evolution of the music, Legends behind the songs, the Stars who presented and enriched the genre, and much more.” “The full collection,” this same source goes on, “contains several thousand pieces and covers the history of mariachi from the year 1500 to the present day” (San Diego International Mariachi Summit, 2022). Marsh helped finance the exhibit and, in 2021, donated “more than 1,000 LP recordings, 37 bronze and resin busts, numerous historic instruments, trajes worn by members of Mariachi Vargas, photographs, artwork, and more” to the Mariachi Scholarship Foundation for display in the museum and study by mariachi researchers (San Diego International Mariachi Summit, 2022; see Figures 3 and 4).
The exhibit’s position on the third (top) floor of the Southwestern College Library allows for a nonlinear user experience since it is not immediately obvious to the visitor where the museum space begins or ends. There are advantages and disadvantages to such a design. On the one hand, it integrates the exhibit into the library and allows visitors to experience the sections at their own pace or according to their interests. Also, although the exhibition is open to the general public, many of its visitors will likely be students, staff, and faculty, who may find it more convenient to peruse the displays between classes or on study breaks, making it an ideal setup for those wishing to appreciate it on multiple visits. On the other hand, the layout may be confusing to a first-time visitor or seem disjointed. This is especially true as one attempts to navigate sections of the exhibit that are spread out along the library’s outer walls rather than consolidated in a dedicated room or wing. For visitors not affiliated with Southwestern College, the touring experience may also feel uncomfortable, possibly even intrusive, as one moves between sections near students who use the library for study and research. Another possible problem is that the museum space competes with a more “traditional” library culture at Southwestern. Librarians encouraged those of us on the tour, even Nevin himself in his role as curator at one point, to keep our voices down lest we disturb patrons.Footnote 14 Many displays included signs with QR codes that link to audio or video recordings of songs and interviews with mariachis. Unless the visitor saves these QR codes to explore after the tour, the quiet library culture at Southwestern necessitates enjoying these on one’s own, presumably with headphones. The most satisfying visitor experience might therefore come from visiting on one’s own rather than in a group. In fact, a few hours before my group tour with Nevin, I did just that, exploring ahead of the others to gain familiarity with the space, its layout, content, and flow, and also because it provided the opportunity to take enough photographs for later analysis in a way that would not disrupt Nevin and the tour to come.
All this being said, the exhibit certainly does have an intended starting point, marked by a sign in front of the main reference desk on the third (top) floor (see also Mariachi Scholarship Foundation, 2024). This placement serves a wayfinding purpose and invites the visitor to speak with the librarian or staff member for directions in case of confusion. On the back wall behind the reference desk, the visitor to the Marsh Mariachi Museum Exhibit is met with wall signage that introduces the history and purpose of the museum and presents both Marsh, as principal donor, and Nevin, as curator and president of the Mariachi Scholarship Foundation. From this point, the visitor is inclined to move leftward along the wall as the exhibit spaces, including display cases and sculptures, snake along the outer walls of the entire floor. One notable exception is a cluster of display cases near the middle of the floor, behind the main stairway, that impressively showcase a variety of influences on the evolution of modern-day mariachi (e.g., cases to display African, European Renaissance, and Indigenous Mexican era instruments). Notably, signage provides information in both English and Spanish. The bilingual layout makes good linguistic and cultural sense for a mariachi museum, of course, and makes the space even more accessible for Spanish speakers given that Southwestern College (designated a Hispanic-serving institution (HSI) by the US Department of Education; Southwestern College, 2023b) is located in Chula Vista, near the US-Mexico border.
Nevin met with me and two other visitors in March of 2023 for an approximately two-hour tour. With infectious enthusiasm and a deep knowledge of the subject born from decades of experience as a professor and professional musician, he moved us between sections, patiently answered our questions, and introduced us to the basics of mariachi history and culture as well as the rise in academic interest in mariachi, including the role played by Southwestern College. One highlight of the tour came when we were introduced to the myriad meanings of the word mariachi, the subject of one exhibit section. Mariachi, we learned, is not etymologically French, as some have posited, based on the erroneous theory that it derived from the French word for marriage (mariage) given the French presence in Mexico and the need for local musicians to play “mariage (marriage) music.” Although the exact origin of the word mariachi is still unclear, Nevin emphasized the more important point that “mariachi grew out of the combination of Spanish, Indigenous and African music in Mexico” and is a synthesis or amalgam of numerous styles and influences (San Diego International Mariachi Summit, 2022). In appreciation of the diverse cultural meanings of mariachi, our attention was directed to nearby placard subsections with titles such as “‘Mariachi’ is a Place,” “‘Mariachi’ is a Party,” and “‘Mariachi’ is a Dance.”
On another wall, Nevin showed us a display about the bolero. This romantic song form originated in Cuba in the late nineteenth century and has become a musical staple for mariachis (see, e.g., Reference PedeltyPedelty, 1999). In Spanish, bolero is also a term for a “shoeshine boy” and this section of the museum showcases a rare photograph of Rubén Fuentes dressed as a shoeshine worker wearing the classic mariachi traje charro. Nevin knew Fuentes and has worked with Mariachi Vargas. Visitors can benefit from this close relationship by accessing QR codes on the wall with numerous resources, including an interview with Fuentes about creating the first bolero ranchero (i.e., bolero in the style of mariachi). The visitor discovers that it came about in the late 1940s during a Musician Union’s strike in Mexico City – one in which mariachis continued to work as “they didn’t consider us to be musicians,” Fuentes recalled to Nevin (San Diego International Mariachi Summit, 2022). As a matter of commercial survival, Fuentes understood that he would need to “teach the mariachis to play romantic music,” leading to the creation of the bolero ranchero as it is known today in the mariachi world (San Diego International Mariachi Summit, 2022). This anecdote highlights the marginalization of mariachi and its success in adapting and gaining more popular acceptance as the genre continued to evolve in the twentieth century.
The exhibit highlights mariachi culture as well as the history and evolution of mariachi music and influential musicians. This museological strategy invites the visitor to appreciate how something as intangible or ephemeral as a musical genre can be apprehended and displayed in terms of its material culture, even beyond the displays of instruments and the audiovisual element afforded by QR codes. Elsewhere in the museum, for instance, one discovers, among other items, album covers, paintings, photographs, awards, sculptures of luminaries from Mariachi Vargas, folklórico dresses, and even trajes worn by famous mariachi musicians, such as José “Pepe” Martínez (see Figure 5).
We learned that Nevin and the Mariachi Scholarship Foundation have a three-year exhibit agreement with Southwestern College Library (San Diego International Mariachi Summit, 2022). The day after the tour, Nevin and I sat down for an interview that shed even more light on his role at Southwestern, the museum’s history, and the future of mariachi studies. He described a path that brought him to the college after graduating with a PhD in music composition from the University of California in San Diego and many years of work as a composer, arranger, conductor, educator, and curator.Footnote 15 “I identify as a composer,” Nevin told me. “To be honest, I haven’t actually composed that much music. I do a ton of arranging,” he went on, citing, for instance, impressive work done for Rubén Fuentes and Mariachi Vargas.Footnote 16 For many years, he served as conductor of the Southwestern College Symphony Orchestra (Virtuoso Reference MariachiMariachi, 2020a), and for over twenty-five years has played trumpet for the San Diego Symphony. In addition to leading Southwestern’s Mariachi Garibaldi, he heads his own mariachi group, Mariachi Champaña Nevin, known for its innovative combinations of mariachi and classical music (Virtuoso Reference MariachiMariachi, 2020b).
In 1998, Southwestern’s then-president, Serafin Zasueta, recruited Nevin to teach at the college, head up the mariachi program, and mature it into a degree option (Reference ClarkClark, 2005; Mariachi Scholarship Foundation, 2020). “Somebody offered me a job here to start the mariachi program,” Nevin remembered in our interview. “The thing that really appealed to me was when he [Zasueta] said he wanted to have a college degree in mariachi music. I said, ‘Yes, of course, I’ll do that for you.’ It was a full-time job to be the first person in the world to create that. That was more interesting to me than being one of 10,000 music theory professors someplace.” In addition to spearheading the mariachi degree program, which formally came to fruition in 2004, Nevin has published the textbook Virtuoso Mariachi (Reference Nevin2002) and numerous bilingual mariachi mastery resource guides and songbooks, tailored for score, violin, trumpet, armonía, guitarrón, harp, viola, and cello/bass (Reference Nevin2006, Reference Nevin2016a, Reference Nevin2016b, Reference Nevin2017a, Reference Nevin2017b, Reference Nevin2019).Footnote 17 These are used widely in schools, universities, and independent mariachi education programs throughout the US. “I wrote these books that we use in the classroom and that thousands of people have used in their classrooms,” Nevin said, waving to copies in his office that he shares with his students. “It is a labor of love.”
“The museum came up through Ed [Marsh],” Nevin explained. “I never had the idea that I was going to do a mariachi museum, but he offered this, and I said, I already have all this history that I’ve been compiling for 20 years that’s part of my class. If I could get some funding and actually use that to put this together, maybe we’ll have the first or the biggest mariachi history museum [here] at the college.” The museum came to life in collaboration with the Mariachi Scholarship Foundation, which received mariachi materials and construction support from Marsh, with Nevin serving as part-time curator. With help from a graphic designer, Nevin worked with the college library to secure the space and prepare the displays and cases. He is already preparing for the museum’s future and expansion, intending to relocate the exhibit to a dedicated space in another building. Nevin is cautious about claiming that Southwestern houses the only mariachi museum in the US, since there have been temporary or traveling exhibits over the years and some Mexican restaurants, such as Casa del Sol in Los Angeles (owned by famed mariachi José Hernández), display trajes and artifacts (Casa del Sol, 2023). “If I could find the space,” Nevin confessed with humility, “I would make it more complete, a museum of the whole history of mariachi,” even beyond the exhibit’s already extensive efforts to survey major themes and developments in mariachi history over the last 500 years.Footnote 18 At one point, Nevin went on, the college “even told me that I shouldn’t use the word museum because museum implies a building, whereas this is in the library, so you should use the word exhibit.” In the end, the terms museum and exhibit were combined to create the “Ed Marsh Mariachi Museum Exhibit,” as it was advertised, with the title “Mariachi: Historia, Estrellas, Leyendas” (Reference MijaresMijares, 2022; GB Magazine, 2022).
During our interview, Nevin recognized the role of American researchers and Mexican American students in mariachi studies, not to mention the ironic influence of the US on Mexico as it slowly begins to mirror American enthusiasm for this expression of Mexican music. In the US, famous mariachi groups such as Mariachi Vargas are regarded as “rock stars,” Nevin pointed out. Professional mariachi groups “come to the United States and they treat them better than a lot of the times in Mexico,” he continued. “The Mexican folks [who appreciate mariachi] say, ‘I can’t believe this is happening in the United States. We have to do that here too [i.e., in Mexico].’” “There’s a value that a lot of the Mexican Americans place on mariachis that a lot of the Mexican people themselves don’t necessarily feel,” he went on, and described a nostalgia factor in the US, where the musical form serves as a cultural connection across generations, especially when younger Mexican Americans may no longer speak Spanish yet learn to sing in Spanish in mariachi performance programs. “Imagine the 70-year-old grandma that sees her 15-year-old [grand]kid,” Nevin said. “They literally don’t speak the same language, but getting dressed up [in trajes] and singing the songs, they know the same songs.”
As a mariachi scholar and professional musician, Nevin has an eye on the past, present, and future of mariachi. “My personal opinion is that mariachi’s going to be evolved more into something like ‘classical music,’ where there are more and more groups that are going to play songs … they’re going to keep playing music that has been created over the last hundred years, and that’s going to become like a classical tradition.” This point is reiterated in Nevin’s published work, such as his comparison of mariachi to jazz: “Mariachi music today is at a very similar point in its evolution to that of jazz music in the 1970s. While still generally regarded as purely ‘folk’ music, many scholars, musicians, students and mariachi enthusiasts have grown to respect the rich and diverse history of mariachi” (Reference Nevin and SanchezNevin & Sanchez, 2006, p. 11). “Many classical-music composers, as diverse as Aaron Copeland and Silvestre Revueltas,” the same source goes on, “have drawn upon mariachi music as inspiration … Clearly mariachi is poised to take its place among the other great classical music of the world” (Reference Nevin and SanchezNevin & Sanchez, 2006, p. 11; cf. Reference SheehySheehy, 2006, p. 8). Section 3 considers open areas for research, including evolutions in the genre in relation to “traditional” versus “classical” forms of expression.
As far as the future of the mariachi museum housed at Southwestern is concerned, only time will tell. Still, it enjoys a firm footing thanks to the efforts of the Mariachi Scholarship Foundation and philanthropic support from Marsh and others. Whether the exhibit will remain in the library following its initial three-year commitment remains to be seen. Based on this tour, interview, and observations of Southwestern College, numerous logistical possibilities exist. One is that the museum could stay put and find a permanent home in the library, either in its current location or a more dedicated and private space, which would minimize any possible noise disruptions to library operations. Another is that the museum moves to another building at Southwestern College, such as the new student union building now under construction (Southwestern College, 2023c). Of course, the museum could build relationships with organizations outside Southwestern College but remain in the San Diego area. A partnership might be formed between the Mariachi Scholarship Foundation and, say, the San Diego History Center in Balboa Park or the nearby Chula Vista Heritage Museum.
The museum might also digitize portions of its collection and make them available on a website, hosted independently or within a partner organization such as the Southwestern College Library. This second option would allow Nevin and the Mariachi Scholarship Foundation to utilize expertise in librarianship, digitization, archiving, and preservation and increase access for those who cannot visit in person. One model for a digital collection of mariachi history is Google’s online exhibit, “Mariachi, Patrimonio de la Humanidad” (“Mariachi, World Heritage”) (Google Arts & Culture, 2023). To its credit, a short video tour of the Southwestern exhibit, featuring Reference MarshMarsh and Nevin (2022), might serve as a basis for expansion or a bridge into a more fully digital experience, if incorporated into a dedicated, separate museum website. The opportunities for digital engagement once again reflect the paradoxes of mariachi and its status as a relatively (in)tangible and marginalized culture. On the one hand, it is nonexistent without its people, places, and physical objects (musicians, instruments, audiences, albums, clothing, etc.) (see, e.g., Reference ConnConn, 2010) but, on the other hand, it is also increasingly transmissible in digital and intangible forms that can allow for preservation, dissemination, survival, and widespread use.
3 A Survey of Some Open Areas for Research
This final section moves beyond the previous discussion of philanthropy and museums and suggests a number of other open areas for mariachi studies as it continues to move forward into the twenty-first century. In particular, I wish to draw attention to interdisciplinary possibilities that might not be obvious based on the extant English academic literature. In Virtuoso Mariachi (Reference Nevin2002), for instance, Nevin wrote extensively about a spirit of innovation, change, and experimentation in mariachi history, and I believe that this same spirit ought to apply to mariachi studies as well. “I dare say that many if not most of the people who scorn mariachis like Mariachi Sol de Mexico for their ‘too modern’ and ‘non-traditional’ music – probably the same people who said the same thing about much of Mariachi Vargas’ more innovative music years ago,” Nevin argued, “would not even know anything of the existence of mariachi were it not – at least indirectly – for these innovative composers, ensembles, and their innovations” (Reference Nevin2002, p. 208). “I view the entire history and tradition of the modern mariachi as one which has embraced change,” he continued, “and I feel that there is no reason to stop now – there still seems to be quite a bit that can be done” (Reference Nevin2002, p. 209). When asked about the future of mariachi, historian Jonathan Clark reflected in an interview that “mariachi music has always been resilient and has been able to successfully adapt to adverse circumstances and situations” (Reference SperrySperry, 2011, p. 165). “One of the biggest obstacles holding us back,” according to Clark, “is a lack of solidarity and conscientiousness on the part of mariachi musicians and groups … If we allow our music to become devalued or debased, the whole concept of mariachi education becomes superfluous … We need to focus on the bigger picture and work for the greater good of all who play and enjoy this music” (Reference SperrySperry, 2011, pp. 165–66). In this spirit of humility and collaboration, drawing on this sense of innovation and inevitable change from Nevin as well as respect for mariachi’s roots from Clark, I offer the following as a survey of some open areas for future academic research that might benefit from interdisciplinary research methods and foster even more scholarly attention to this subfield.
First of all, the current state of the academic field must be acknowledged, especially since it suggests pathways forward and illustrates the richness of mariachi studies as it has developed in English scholarship from the mid-twentieth century to the present. A number of these essential and seminal works have already been mentioned, such as Daniel E. Sheehy’s Mariachi Music in America (Reference Sheehy2006) and the contributions of Jonathan Clark, and I direct readers to the References for a list that is intended to be representative but by no means exhaustive.Footnote 19 The last decade, in particular, witnessed a steep rise in the number of mariachi-themed theses and dissertations coming out of American universities, not surprisingly from centers with mariachi academic programming and ensembles.Footnote 20 These, in turn, owe a debt of gratitude to earlier pioneers in mariachi studies, such as Mark Fogelquist, whose UCLA thesis (Reference Fogelquist1975) on the contemporary son jaliscience is regarded as a landmark piece that paved the way for others. According to historian Jonathan Clark, Fogelquist’s thesis was (and remains) so well respected among mariachi researchers that hundreds of photocopies were made and distributed among English-speaking students and scholars in the years before the rise of the Internet.Footnote 21
UCLA has long been a hub for mariachi research, student groups, and bands, tracing to the early 1960s (see, e.g., Appendix B). Robert M. Stevenson, a longtime UCLA musicology faculty member and advisor, published Music in Mexico in 1952 (UCLA Today, 2013). Even before Reference FogelquistFogelquist’s 1975 thesis, one can find a 1967 thesis from Susan Cashion entitled “The Son and Jarabe: Mestizo Dance Forms of Jalisco, Mexico,” which paved the way for her later study and promotion of the Mexican folkloric dance movement (Reference HoustonHouston, 2018). In 1974, Daniel Sheehy completed a master’s thesis at UCLA on “Speech Deviations as one of the Determinants of Style in the Son Jarocho of Veracruz, Mexico.” In 1976, Lawrence (Larry) Saunders completed a dissertation at UCLA on “The Son Huasteco: A Historical, Social, and Analytical Study of a Mexican Regional Folk Genre.” Sheehy’s dissertation (1979) on the son jarocho deserves special mention, and he, as with Fogelquist, has enjoyed a long career as a professional mariachi and educator. Sheehy would go on to direct the Folk & Traditional Arts program for the National Endowment for the Arts and then the acclaimed Smithsonian Folkways Recordings (Smithsonian Global, n.d.). Fogelquist directed groups such as Mariachi Uclatlán and Mariachi Estrellas de Chula Vista and has taught in numerous mariachi programs. He pioneered a renowned mariachi program at Wenatchee High School (Washington State) and has more recently worked at Chula Vista High School in southern California (with many of his students going on to undergraduate mariachi programs, such as Nevin’s at nearby Southwestern College) (Mariachi Reference SpectacularSpectacular, 2022).
In the 1980s, theses and dissertations focused more on mariachi in the United States, reflecting the popularity, influence, and growing appreciation of Mexican music and culture outside its home country. For instance, Steven Loza’s UCLA dissertation (Reference Loza1985) analyzed mariachi and other traditions in twentieth century Los Angeles and employed historical and ethnographic methodologies. Loza went on to become a UCLA professor and, in 1993, published Barrio Rhythm: Mexican American Music in Los Angeles. A few years after Loza’s dissertation, Steven Ray Pearlman, also at UCLA, completed a dissertation (1988) on “Mariachi Music in Los Angeles” that drew on ethnomusicological and anthropological approaches. Output only increased in the early 2000s, with theses and dissertations by Reference DoddDodd (2001), Reference HenriquesHenriques (2006), Reference RodríguezRodríguez (2006), and Reference MulhollandMulholland (2007a), among others. Russell Rodríguez, in particular, has emerged as a significant ethnomusicological voice, authoring numerous mariachi works (see, e.g., Reference Rodríguez, Oboler and González2005, Reference Rodríguez, Nájera-Ramírez, Cantu and Romero2009, Reference Rodríguez, Cantú and Fránquiz2010, Reference Rodríguez and Zolov2015, Reference Rodríguez2023). He now teaches in the music department at the University of California in Santa Cruz (UC Santa Cruz, 2019). Mary-Lee Mulholland, who teaches in the sociology and anthropology department at Mount Royal University in Canada (2023), has similarly emerged as a leading and prolific scholar with several mariachi publications (see, e.g., Reference Mulholland2004, Reference Mulholland2007b, Reference Mulholland2013, Reference Mulholland2021).
Production of theses and dissertations in mariachi studies has continued to rise since 2010, with many works coming from second-generation Mexican Americans and mariachis, including a growing number of women as the genre has diversified (Reference ApelesApeles, 2020). These include graduate students who have employed autoethnographic methods or analyzed mariachi history in local or regional terms, including particular states, cities, festivals, and mariachi programs for youth. For instance, Lauryn Reference SalazarSalazar (2011) completed an ethnomusicological dissertation at UCLA entitled “From Fiesta to Festival: Mariachi Music in California and the Southwestern United States.” Salazar now teaches at Texas Tech University, where she directs the mariachi program and its ensemble Mariachi Los Matadores (Texas Tech University, 2023). She is also a harpist for the Grammy-winning group Mariachi Divas de Cindy Shea (Reference SalazarSalazar, 2015, Reference Salazar2023). Two years later, Ricketts’ dissertation at Boston University (Reference Ricketts2013) relied on ethnography and oral historical methods to study mariachi instructors and programs at the K-12 levels in Texas. In 2014, Alexandro Hernández’s dissertation at UCLA analyzed the “son jarocho and its fandango as a migratory and transformative musical culture between nations and social circumstances” (Reference Hernández2014), with a focus on Mexico and the US (especially California). In the last decade, increased attention has been paid to race, gender, and sexuality, especially in light of the often patriarchal nature of mariachi groups and culture in Mexico. One notable contribution is Leticia Soto Flores’ UCLA dissertation: “How Musical is Woman?: Performing Gender in Mariachi Music” (Reference Flores2015). In 2017, Mónica Fogelquist, the daughter of Mark Fogelquist, completed a thesis at the University of Texas (Rio Grande Valley) on the subject of “Elevating my Chicana Feminist Consciousness through the United States’ First Female Show Mariachi.” The younger Fogelquist, who earlier in life played for Mariachi Reyna de Los Angeles, a preeminent all-women group, went on to teach mariachi studies at UT Austin and direct the University of Texas mariachi ensemble there as an assistant professor of practice (Reference CatchingsCatchings, 2019). Other mariachi-themed theses have emerged in the intervening years (e.g., Reference GaribayGaribay, 2017; Reference LiuLiu, 2017; Reference SuarezSuarez, 2017; Reference MunguíaMunguía, 2018; Reference SmithSmith, 2018; Reference GuerraGuerra, 2021; Reference JuarezJuarez, 2021; Reference Morgan-ThorntonMorgan-Thornton, 2021) that likewise forefront issues in gender and race in the mariachi community, both in the US and Mexico.
More recent theses and dissertations offer an excellent window into some of the interdisciplinary research methods beginning to emerge within mariachi studies that make use of ethnomusicology, anthropology, history, and sociology. Based on these trends and trajectories, it seems likely that graduate-level research will only continue to increase, and perhaps we will see material from these theses and dissertations, and others to come, revised and expanded in the form of journal articles, book chapters, and monographs so that they reach even wider audiences. One important academic publication for mariachi research in Mexico is the Spanish-language Memorias del Coloquio series associated with El Colegio de Jalisco (2023). However, a new bilingual journal, the International Journal of Mariachi Education and Performance, is helping fill a gap by providing a dedicated place for mariachi studies in English and Spanish. Published by the independent Mariachi Education Press,Footnote 22 which also produces music guides for performers (Reference Spectacular2023), the journal’s inaugural issue was released in May 2021 and included articles, book reviews, and even reviews of technology and CDs (albums/recordings). The articles cover a wide range of topics and, for the most part, take a pedagogical approach, such as Ramon Rivera’s “How to Keep Your Mariachi Students Motivated During Online Learning” (Reference Rivera2021, pp. 23–27), Mónica Fogelquist’s “The Ingredients for a Successful Mariachi Program in Your School” (Reference Fogelquist2021, pp. 59–64), and Rachel Yvonne Cruz’s “Has Mariachi Education Lost Its Mexicanismo?” (2021, pp. 90–97). There is also a section on mariachi history, edited by Jonathan Clark, who authored an in-depth biographical article, “Laura Garciacano Sobrino: California’s Archetypical Mariachera” (2021, pp. 103–40).
In addition to increased interest in women, gender, sexuality, race, colonialism, student groups, and the “Americanization” of mariachi, which I suspect will continue in the years to come, the scope of mariachi studies might continue to diversify and internationalize. For example, more attention should be paid to the intersection between urban history and mariachi studies, with case studies of particular cities and festivals. One example is a forthcoming study of music in San Antonio (UTSA, 2024), which will include mariachi – all the more appropriate given that the city hosted the first international mariachi conference in 1979 (Reference ClarkClark, 1980). This project is co-sponsored by the University of Texas in San Antonio’s library/special collections department and the UTSA Institute of Texan Cultures, and similar to the mariachi museum at Southwestern College, offers an example of how scholars, librarians, and archivists can collaborate in ways that are mutually beneficial across disciplines. Another case in point is the collaboration, mentioned in Section 1, between UCLA’s Chicano Studies Research Center and the Arhoolie Foundation (2012). Somewhat along these lines, but more in the sphere of museum and archival studies, the mariachi materials at Smithsonian Folkways Recordings are worthy of more academic attention, given the breadth and depth of their holdings and outreach (such as a magazine, podcasts, videos, and lesson plans) (Smithsonian Reference FolkwaysFolkways, 2024). Moreover, there are now many archival collections in the United States with mariachi materials, which are ripe for research and analysis (see Appendix C, “Selected Archival and Digital Collections”). Beyond attention to particular cities, such as Los Angeles, San José, Albuquerque, San Antonio, Tucson, and Rosarito, among others, researchers ought to also consider the ways in which mariachi is expressed outside of North America entirely. Professional groups such as Mariachi Vargas tour internationally, and the same is true for some student groups, such as Jeff Nevin’s Mariachi Garibaldi (Southwestern College), which has performed in Germany, Belgium, Egypt, Russia, and China, among others (Virtuoso Reference MariachiMariachi, 2020c). Indeed, mariachi bands and culture can be found worldwide, such as in Peru, Chile, Colombia, Japan, Croatia, Italy, and Germany (see, e.g., Reference Martínez de la Rosa and KuMartínez de la Rosa, 2014; Reference Becerra and KuBecerra, 2014; Reference Arias and KuArias, 2014; Reference Neira and KuNeira, 2014; Reference Corbella and KuCorbella, 2015; Reference MaloneMalone, 2019; Reference MulhollandMulholland, 2021; Reference ChristiansenChristiansen, 2023).
The more familiar fields, such as ethnomusicology and Chicano/a studies, are inherently interdisciplinary, but there are other disciplinary paths for mariachi studies researchers to explore and cultivate. These include, for instance, perceptions and representations of mariachi in popular culture and specifically the relationship between the popularization of mariachi and its depiction in “Golden Age” radio and films, both in Mexico and the US (see, e.g., Reference MulhollandMulholland, 2004; Reference ClarkClark, 2005; Reference Henriques and MadridHenriques, 2011; Reference Toxqui, Neufeld and MatthewsToxqui, 2015). While there have been analyses of specific films with mariachi themes, such as Robert Rodriguez’s 1991 film El Mariachi (Reference Kim and AldamaKim, 2013), many more cinematic representations deserve fuller examination, such as the film history of Mariachi Vargas. Another open avenue that could incorporate a media studies approach is a study of English language documentaries on or featuring mariachis. Examples include Enemies of Silence: The Adventures of Two Travelling Musicians (BBC, 1991), Mariachi: The Spirit of Mexico (Reference Clark, Shepherd, Oliver, Wicke, Horn and Laing2003), Pasajero: A Journey of Time and Memory (2004), ¡Viva el Mariachi! (2004), Mariachi High (2012), and Going Varsity in Mariachi (2023).Footnote 23
With respect to philanthropy and museum studies, more research ought to be carried out on the role of philanthropists, concert organizers, collectors, and promoters such as Marsh and Strachwitz. This includes museological work related to the Silvestre Vargas Museum in Tecalitlán or the mariachi museum in Cocula. While it may not be possible to pinpoint the exact origins of the word mariachi, a museum studies perspective shifts attention to the manner in which particular groups and towns, such as Tecalitlán and Cocula, appeal to their venerable mariachi roots for the sake of prestige and tourism. Indeed, the intersection of mariachi studies with museum and tourism studies is a natural fit, given how cities, especially in the US, attract tourists to the mariachi economy through concerts and festivals.Footnote 24 One of the largest such gatherings takes place annually in San Antonio, which in 2024 will celebrate its 30th annual Mariachi Extravaganza (Reference CamachoCamacho, 2023). While the US of course cannot claim to be the birthplace of mariachi, it has devised its own means of diasporic commemoration, such as a “Mariachi Music Hall of Fame” in Albuquerque. Past honorees include Mark Fogelquist, Laura Sobrino, Noberta Fresquez, Rubén Fuentes, José “Pepe” Martínez, Natividad “Nati” Santiago, and Miguel Martínez (Mariachi Reference SpectacularSpectacular, 2023).Footnote 25
Albuquerque, however, is not the only city with a mariachi hall of fame. Others exist in Tucson, Arizona and Rosarito Beach, Mexico (Reference DrakeDrake, 2018; Tucson Internfational Mariachi Conference, 2024), so comparing and contrasting these programs through the lenses of museum studies, cultural studies, and music history might be fruitful. Their existence may also indicate open areas for biographical work on particular musicians and supporters. Another possibility is to view mariachi halls of fame and museums as opportunities to shift attention away from biographical forms of research and toward organizational studies that assess the role of institutions and volunteer groups that support such initiatives in the first place. Some of these have already been mentioned, such as the Mariachi Scholarship Foundation, and there are others, including La Frontera Center, the Mariachi and Ballet Folklórico Society, Texas Association of Mariachi Educators (TAME), Mariachi Internaciónal TAMIU, and the Nuestra Cultura Mariachi Association, to name a few.
Mariachi’s future as a genre and varieties of its more “traditional” and “classical” expressions should be more fully examined, since these offer entry points into its history, evolution, and innovation. Some mariachi groups, for example, have more conservative views on styles and instruments, such as eschewing the trumpet since it is a twentieth-century addition to the mariachi ensemble (see, e.g., Reference Braojos and RodríguezBraojos & Rodríguez, 2004; Los Cenzontles Mexican Arts Center, 2016). Meanwhile, professional mariachis and composers such as Jeff Nevin are pushing the genre forward, with supporters like Marsh advocating for collaborations with classically trained performers and symphony orchestras. Juanita Ulloa, a professional Opera singer and music professor at Chaney College and the California Jazz Conservatory (Reference Ulloa2023) represents another push toward innovation and mariachi’s vocal future within a field traditionally dominated by men. In addition to academic work (Reference Ulloa and Hoch2019, Reference Ulloa2024), Ulloa has been described as the “High Priestess of Operachi” for her albums and performances that draw on “huapango singing in mariachi style along with boleros and ballads [with] a unique Operachi twist” (Reference UlloaUlloa, 2023). Ulloa also edited a three-volume set of songs and sheet music from Antonio Gomezanda (1894–1961), who, in the late 1920s, wrote the first mariachi opera (opera ranchera) (see Reference UlloaUlloa, 2018a, Reference Ulloa2018b, Reference Ulloa2018c). Decades later, Mariachi Vargas, in a collaboration between José “Pepe” Martínez and Leonard Foglia, unveiled the mariachi opera Cruzar la Cara de la Luna (To Cross the Face of the Moon) (Reference ChuChu, 2023). Cruzar la Cara de la Luna is often advertised as the “world’s first mariachi opera” (see, e.g., Reference DowningDowning, 2010; Reference ChuteChute, 2013), suggesting that more research should be conducted on the development, composition, and performance of mariachi operas and their reception in and out of Mexico. The intersection of mariachi music and religious culture is another area that deserves fuller examination, especially in light of the genre’s use in the Catholic mass (misa) (see, e.g., Reference Clark, Shepherd, Oliver, Wicke, Horn and LaingClark, 2003; Reference Campbell, Flores, Schippers and GrantCampbell & Flores, 2016, pp. 287–88) and other settings. As Campbell and Flores observed: “Beyond Mexico and Catholicism, mariachi groups have also been invited to perform for religious and cultural ceremonies of the Jewish, Buddhist, and Muslim beliefs. Saint Augustine of Hippo once wrote: ‘He who sings, prays twice,’ and many have found it in their hearts to sing devotionally with mariachi music” (Reference Campbell, Flores, Schippers and Grant2016, p. 288).
Mariachi’s relationship to material culture and visual (rather than performing) art is yet another possible subject. This might take the shape of focusing on paintings with mariachi themes or perhaps a historical and sociological analysis of charro suits or folklórico dresses. In July 2022, the United States Postal Service began issuing commemorative mariachi stamps (2023), one material and cultural sign that the genre has achieved a level of recognition at the national (i.e., federal) level. “Filled with passion, rhythm, and stories of life, love, and loss,” reads the government’s description of the new stamps, “mariachi music is an integral element of Mexican American culture that has found fans around the world” (United States Postal Service, 2023). The stamps, designed by Rafael López, are intended to convey the “vibrant spirit of Mexican music” and were inspired in part by the artist’s “nostalgic weekends listening to the uniquely Mexican sound of Mariachi music in Plaza Garibaldi in Mexico City” (Reference LopezLópez, 2022). The 2011 UNESCO designation of mariachi music as a form of intangible cultural heritage, while significant, once again obscures how this genre is bound up within an influential and enduring culture, one that continues to gain recognition and currency, especially in the American diaspora. Items such as American postal stamps serve to forefront and express Mexican culture for larger audiences and in the process raise awareness that perhaps contributes to musical sustainability (see, e.g., Reference Campbell, Flores, Schippers and GrantCampbell & Flores, 2016).
Most of the interdisciplinary paths described so far presume a reliance on qualitative methodologies, but this need not necessarily be the case. There is ample room for mariachi research projects with quantitative or mixed methods approaches as well. In the field of education, for instance, mariachi programs have been cited in the literature as a positive force in building community, promoting student achievement, and raising retention and graduation rates at the K-12 levels in the US (Reference CraneCrane, 2002; Reference Carranza and GradanteCarranza, 2008; Reference HillardHillard, 2009; Reference SperrySperry, 2011, pp. 198–202; Reference SalazarSalazar, 2015; Reference LiuLiu, 2017; Reference SmithSmith, 2018). In one study (Reference Kalinec-CraigKalinec-Craig, 2015), a Texas researcher even investigated the pedagogical benefits of using mariachi to help third-graders learn fractions by framing “equivalent fractions in the context of traditional mariachi arrangements, such as ‘Las Mañanitas’” (Reference ChavezChavez, 2016). Another area that might benefit from a quantitative approach is an analysis of the uses of the word mariachi and associated terms in American newspapers and social media, as one way to draw on information, media, or journalistic studies and assess trends in popular culture. A similar approach could be brought to bear on the academic literature, for instance with the use of citation search methods or databases such as Web of Science and ProQuest. This strategy might also be useful in preparation for an annotated bibliography or to develop a literature review on sources available in English, Spanish, and other languages. Another open area for a mixed methods analysis is a study of themes and word uses within mariachi songs themselves, though this would of course require a knowledge of Spanish unless one relies on English translations.
As the academic study of mariachi continues to grow and move both within and beyond its roots in ethnomusicology and performance, interdisciplinary breadth and depth will contribute to its development in the years to come and expose this important subfield to other researchers, in and outside of adjacent fields such as Latin American studies and Chicano(a) studies. In so doing, academic researchers of mariachi and mariachi performers will stand on the shoulders of giants in and out of Mexico, including American musicians, educators, collectors, philanthropists, and festival organizers who have aided in its growth and popularization and who have worked to preserve the tangible and intangible expressions of this dynamic music and its rich cultures.
Appendix A Selected Timeline of Mariachi Studies and Higher Education Programs in the US, 1960–2024
This timeline focuses on developments in the academic study of mariachi in English as well as its cultural reception, with a focus on the US. It is representative but by no means exhaustive. For example, this timeline does not reflect the rich and complex history of mariachi programs in American elementary, middle, and high schools.
- 1961:
Mariachi student group (Conjunto Uclatlán) begins at UCLA’s Institute of Ethnomusicology, spearheaded by graduate student Donald R. “Donn” Borcherdt. Violinist Jesús Sánchez (Don Chuy) is hired to teach a performance class that focuses on three genres: mariachi, son jarocho, and son huasteco. Sanchez would later direct Mariachi Nuevo Calistatlan in the 1970s at California State University, Los Angeles.
- 1970:
UCLA mariachi student group becomes Mariachi Uclatlán (“land of UCLA”).
- 1972:
Mark Fogelquist teaches mariachi performance class at San José City College. Rebecca Gonzales is one of the attendees.
- 1972:
Mariachi student group begins at New Mexico Highlands University
- 1973:
El Mariachi Aztlan group formed at California State University, Northridge.
- 1974:
Daniel Sheehy completes MA thesis at UCLA: “Speech Deviations as one of the Determinants of Style in the Son Jarocho of Veracruz, Mexico.”
- 1974:
Mariachis play at first graduation ceremony at the University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA). The band at UTSA is Mariachi Los Paisanos.
- 1975:
Mark Fogelquist completes MA thesis at UCLA: “Rhythm and Form in the Contemporary Son Jaliscience.”
- 1975:
David Kilpatrick offers course on “The Music of Mexico” at the University of California, Santa Cruz. One of his students is Laura Sobrino (then Laura Ann García).
- 1975:
Belle San Miguel Ortiz offers mariachi course at San Antonio College (Texas). A mariachi group was associated with the college in the late 1970s and early 1980s. A mariachi program re-emerges beginning in 2017.
- 1976:
Daniel Sheehy establishes Mariachi Nuevo Uclatlán at UCLA.
- 1976:
Lawrence (Larry) Saunders completes dissertation at UCLA: “The Son Huasteco: A Historical, Social, and Analytical Study of a Mexican Regional Folk Genre”
- 1977:
University of Texas at Austin and Texas A&M University–Kingsville (formerly Texas A&I) begin offering mariachi ensemble options to students. The University of Texas band is Mariachi Paredes.
- 1979:
First international mariachi conference in San Antonio, Texas is held, building on the success of Juan and Belle Ortiz’s mariachi education school programs.
- 1979:
Daniel Sheehy completes PhD dissertation at UCLA: “The ‘Son Jarocho’: The History, Style, and Repertory of a Changing Mexican Musical Tradition.”
- 1980:
“UCLAtino” first organized at UCLA.
- 1982:
Hermes Rafael publishes Origen e Historia del Mariachi (Origin and History of Mariachi).
- 1982:
First international mariachi conference in Tucson, Arizona begins, with its first concert the following year.
- 1983:
Annual “¡Viva el Mariachi!” festival first held in Fresno, California, created by the nonprofit organization Radio Bilingüe the preceding year.
- 1985:
Mariachi Ensemble begins at Arizona State University.
- 1985:
Steven Loza completes dissertation at UCLA: “The Musical Life of the Mexican/Chicano People in Los Angeles, 1945–1985: A Study in Maintenance, Change, and Adaptation.”
- 1987:
Canciones de Mi Padre released by Linda Ronstadt. It will become the best-selling non-English album in US history. Rubén Fuentes served as producer. In 1991, Ronstadt released Mas Canciones.
- 1988:
Steven Ray Pearlman completes dissertation at UCLA: “Mariachi Music in Los Angeles.”
- 1989:
Nati Cano of Mariachi los Camperos begins teaching a course on “The Music of Mexico” at UCLA. Jesús “Chuy” Guzmán would later continue to offer the course.
- 1989:
Patricia Harpole and Mark Fogelquist publish Los Mariachis! An Introduction to Mexican Mariachi Music, with instructional CD, performed by El Mariachi Uclatlan.
- 1989:
Dahlia Guerra begins a mariachi program at University of Texas, Pan American (now University of Texas Rio Grande Valley). Guerra founded Mariachi Aztlán and UTRGV now sponsors the FESTIBA Mariachi Festival.
- 1990:
Jesús Jáuregui publishes El Mariachi: Símbolo Musical de Mexico (Mariachi: Musical Symbol of Mexico).
- 1990:
Nati Cano receives National Heritage Fellowship from National Endowment for the Arts.
- 1990:
Mariachi USA festival first held in Los Angeles at the Hollywood Bowl.
- 1990:
Mariachi Spectacular founded in Albuquerque.
- 1991:
San José Mexican heritage and mariachi festival first held, with support from the Mexican Heritage Center.
- 1992–1999:
San José State University Mariachi Workshop, led by Jonathan Clark.
- 1993:
Steven Loza publishes Barrio Rhythm: Mexican American Music in Los Angeles (University of Illinois Press).
- 1993:
Mariachi program founded at the University of Arizona.
- 1994:
Los Cenzontles Mexican Arts Center is incorporated (based on a youth group founded in 1990).
- 1994:
Las Cruces International Mariachi conference first held.
- 1994:
Mariachi Cardenal de Stanford formed at Stanford University.
- 1995:
Mariachi Vargas Extravaganza founded in San Antonio, Texas by Cynthia Muñoz. This group holds annual mariachi competitions and summer camps.
- 1996:
Palo Alto College (San Antonio) formally launches mariachi program. The student group then is Mariachi Palomino. The current group is the Palo Alto College Marching Mariachis.
- 1997:
Inauguration of the world’s first mariachi museum, the Museo Silvestre Vargas, in Tecalitlán, Jalisco, Mexico. Mariachi historian Jonathan Clark is a co-founder and curator of the original exhibit.
- 1997:
Jonathan Clark receives grant from National Academy for Recording Arts & Sciences to transcribe and annotate sones by Mariachi Vargas.
- 1997:
University of New Mexico offers mariachi ensemble option to students.
- 1997:
Texas State University (San Marcos) begins offering class for Mariachi Nueva Generación (MNG) in the fall term.
- 1997:
University of Texas (Brownsville) and Texas Southmost College begin Mariachi Alacran which the following year becomes Mariachi Escorpión.
- 1998:
Mariachi Scholarship Foundation (MSF) formally founded, based on the work of Bob Griego, President of Sweetwater Union High School District Board of Directors in California. MSF awards scholarships to high school and college students and later sponsors an international mariachi summit in San Diego.
- 1998:
Jeff Nevin recruited to Southwestern College in Chula Vista, California, to begin a mariachi program. In 2004, Southwestern became the first US college to offer a degree program/mariachi specialization.
- 1999:
Cindy Shea founded Mariachi Divas, which later becomes the official mariachi ensemble of Disneyland.
- September 1999:
University mariachi band founded at Texas A&M University International (Laredo). The current program is Mariachi Internaciónal TAMIU.
- 2000:
Southwest Texas State University (now Texas State University) Mariachi Festival (“Feria del Mariachi”) first held.
- 2001:
Mariachi Véritas group founded at Harvard University.
- 2001:
Dodd completes MA thesis at University of Houston, Clear Lake: “Playing Mariachi Music: Its Influence in Students’ Lives, An Ethnographic Study of Mariachi MECA.”
- 2001–2002:
“A Century of Mariachi Music: The Legacy of Mariachi Vargas de Tecalitlán” exhibit, Mexican Heritage Plaza, San José, California, curated by Jonathan Clark.
- 2002:
Jeff Nevin publishes Virtuoso Mariachi with University Press of America.
- 2002:
Students found Aggieland Mariachi (also known as Mariachi Anillos de Oro) at Texas A&M University in College Station. The group gained university recognition in 2012.
- 2003:
PBS documentary Mariachi: the Spirit of Mexico released.
- 2003:
Mariachi Águilda de UNT founded the University of North Texas (Denton).
- 2004:
Southwestern College begins offering an Associate’s degree in Music–Mariachi Specialization – the first college in the US to do so.
- 2004:
¡Viva el Mariachi! documentary released.
- 2005:
Our Lady of the Lake University (San Antonio) begins offering BA in Music with an emphasis option in mariachi performance and pedagogy.
- 2005:
Mariachi de Brown established at Brown University.
- 2005:
Mariachi Serrano de Claremont formed at the Claremont Colleges in California.
- 2006:
Daniel Sheehy publishes Mariachi Music in America with Oxford University Press.
- 2006:
Jeff Nevin publishes Mariachi Mastery guide with the Neil A. Kjos Music Company, followed by others in the years to come.
- 2006:
Henriques completes dissertation at UT Austin: “Performing Nationalism: Mariachi, Media and the Transformation of a Tradition (1920–1942).”
- 2006:
Russell Rodríguez completes dissertation at University of California, Santa Cruz: “Cultural Production, Legitimation, and the Politics of Aesthetics: Mariachi Transmission, Practice, and Performance In the United States.”
- 2006:
Gil Sperry publishes Mariachi for Gringos: Unlocking the Secrets of Mexico’s Macho Music. In 2011, a second volume, Mariachi for Gringos II: Discovering More of Mexico’s Hottest Songs and Stories, is published.
- 2006:
Mariachi ensemble formed at the University of California at Riverside.
- 2007:
Mary-Lee Mulholland completes dissertation at York University (Canada): “Mariachi in Excess: Performing Race, Gender, Sexuality, and Regionalism in Jalisco, Mexico”
- 2007:
University Interscholastic League (UIL) in Texas begins a regional contest for mariachi. In 2016, the first UIL state-wide competition began.
- 2008:
First volume of Foundations of Mariachi Education, edited by William Gradante, released.
- 2008:
Mariachi program founded under John A. Siqueiros at the University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP) with the Mariachi Los Mineros.
- 2008:
Mariachi Águila de Oro founded at California State University (Los Angeles).
- 2009:
Mariachi Divas de Cindy Shea becomes first all-female mariachi band nominated for a Grammy (which it wins). The band serves as the official mariachi group for Disneyland.
- 2010:
Jonathan Clark, mariachi historian and pioneer, hired as mariachi program director at Stanford University.
- 2010:
Mariachi Los Matadores founded at Texas Tech University in Lubbock.
- 2011:
Lauryn Salazar completes dissertation at UCLA: “From Fiesta to Festival: Mariachi Music in California and the Southwestern United States.”
- 2011:
Mariachi music (“Mariachi, string music, song and trumpet”) recognized by UNESCO as intangible cultural heritage for humanity.
- 2012:
Agustín Gurza, with Johnathan Clark and Chris Strachwitz, publishes The Arhoolie Foundation’s Strachwitz Frontera Collection of Mexican and Mexican American Recordings (UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center Press).
- 2012:
Mariachi Luz de Oro founded at the University of California at Berkeley.
- 2012:
Mariachi ensemble formed at University of San Diego. The university also hosts an annual mariachi conference, dating to 2006.
- Fall 2012:
Mariachi group founded at San Diego State University under Mark Fogelquist.
- 2013:
Jonathan Clark receives Vicente T. Mendoza Award from the Mexican government in recognition of his contributions to a greater understanding of mariachi music, history, and culture.
- 2013:
Ricketts completes dissertation at Boston University: “Mariachi as a Music Education Genre: A Study of Program Status, Pedagogical Practices, and Activities.”
- 2013:
Mariachi Cielito Lindo formed at University of California, Davis.
- 2013:
Mariachi Los Correcaminos founded at Metropolitan State University of Denver.
- 2013:
Mariachi Son de Esperanza formed at Texas A&M University (San Antonio). This group later disbanded and, as of 2022, the official group at the university is Mariachi Los Jaguares del Sur.
- October 2013:
Mariachi Luna Llena recognized as an organization at Rice University in Texas.
- 2014:
International Women’s Mariachi Festival first held in Los Angeles.
- 2014:
Alexandro David Hernández completes dissertation at UCLA: “The Son Jarocho and Fandango Amidst Struggle and Social Movements: Migratory Transformation and Reinterpretation of the Son Jarocho in La Nueva España, México, and the United States.”
- 2014:
Mariachi Fuego founded at the University of Illinois (Chicago).
- 2015:
Leticia Soto Flores completes dissertation at UCLA: “How Musical is Woman?: Performing Gender in Mariachi Music.”
- 2015:
Daniel Sheehy receives National Heritage Fellowship from National Endowment for the Arts.
- 2015–2016:
Mariachi exhibit at LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes in Los Angeles.
- 2016:
Robin Sacolick completes dissertation at UC Santa Cruz: “Transcendence and Son Jarocho as Practiced in the San Francisco Bay Area.”
- 2016:
Mariachi Los Caballeros founded at Cal Poly Pomona.
- 2016:
Mariachi Plata founded at Western New Mexico University.
- 2017:
Monica A. Fogelquist completes master’s thesis at University of Texas, Rio Grande Valley: “Elevating my Chicana Feminist Consciousness through the United States’ First Female Show Mariachi.”
- 2017:
Garibay completes master’s report at California State University, Long Beach: “Towards a Hybrid Approach to Mariachi Education: Bridging the Gap between Formal and Informal Transmission of Musical Culture.”
- 2017:
Suarez completes MA graduate project at California State University, Northridge: “Fina Estampa: A Musical Journey Through Mexico.”
- 2017:
FangYuan Liu completes Master of Music thesis at the University of Arizona: “The Impact of Mariachi Education on Academic Achievement in Tucson High Magnet School and Pueblo Magnet High School.”
- 2018:
Munguía completes MA thesis at California State University, Northridge: “The Impact of Mariachi Instructional Programs on the Son de Mariachi among Student Mariachi Ensembles.”
- 2018:
Smith completes master’s thesis at University of the Pacific: “The Influences of a Mariachi Education on Student Perceptions of Academic Achievement, Academic Attainment, and Student Engagement.”
- 2018:
University of Texas (Rio Grande Valley) begins offering an undergraduate mariachi concentration at its School of Music.
- 2018:
Mariachi Oroazul founded at San José State University.
- 2019:
Monica Fogelquist becomes professor of practice and pioneers a mariachi program at UT Austin. In 2020, Fogelquist teaches “History of Mariachi Music.”
- 2019:
Mariachi Women’s Foundation incorporated in Los Angeles by Leonor X. Perez.
- 2019:
Mariachi Pumas founded at the University of Houston.
- 2019:
Mariachi Osos del Valle formed at Phoenix College.
- 2019:
Mariachi Ocelotlán founded the University of the Pacific.
- 2019:
Mariachi Plata founded at College of Southern Nevada, building on the success of a mariachi course first offered in 2015.
- 2021:
Clyde M. Guerra completes master’s thesis at University of Texas, Rio Grande Valley: “Mariachi Programs at the University Level: Investigating Eurocentric Stereotypes.”
- 2021:
Juarez completes MA thesis at California State University, Los Angeles: “Las Mariachis Suenan: How Mariachi Womyn are Challenging Gender Norms through their Collective Experiences.”
- 2021:
Morgan-Thornton completes Doctor of Music Education thesis at Liberty University: “Analysis of Texas Collegiate Mariachi Ensembles: Standard Repertoire and Genres.”
- May 2021:
First issue of the International Journal of Mariachi Education and Performance released by the Mariachi Education Press.
- July 2022:
Ed Marsh Mariachi Museum Exhibit opens at Southwestern College Library, curated by Jeff Nevin and sponsored by the Mariachi Scholarship Foundation.
- July 2022:
United States Postal Service releases mariachi stamps, designed by Rafael López.
- August 2022:
Mariachi program relaunches at Pima College in Arizona.
- 2023:
Release of documentary Going Varsity in Mariachi, which premieres at Sundance Film Festival.
- 2023:
National Recording Registry of the Library of Congress inducts “The Very First Mariachi Recordings.”
- June 15, 2023:
Mariachi Vargas performs at the White House, building on a growing tradition of mariachi performances for US governmental officials.
- 2024:
Juanita Ulloa publishes The Mariachi Voice with Oxford University Press.
Appendix B Chart of Mariachi Programs in American Higher Education, 1960–2022
Appendix C Selected Archival and Digital Collections
Chicano Studies Research Center, UCLA: https://www.chicano.ucla.edu/library/holdings
Chris Strachwitz Collection, UCLA: https://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8s188w0/?query=mariachi
Donn Borcherdt Collection, 1960–1966, UCLA Ethnomusicology Archive: https://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt0t1nc989/?query=mariachi and https://digital.library.ucla.edu/catalog/ark:/21198/zz002jn50n
El Centro Chicano, Stanford University: https://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt8n39s233/?query=mariachi
Internet Archive, “Mariachi” items: https://archive.org/search?query=mariachi
Mariachi Spectacular Records (MSS 521), Center for Southwest Research and Special Collections, University of New Mexico Libraries. https://nmarchives.unm.edu/repositories/22/resources/1700
Smithsonian Folkways Recordings, https://folkways.si.edu/
Strachwitz Frontera Collection of Mexican and Mexican-American Recordings, UCLA: https://frontera.library.ucla.edu/
Acknowledgments
I am indebted to everyone who spoke or corresponded with me in preparation for this work as it evolved over the last three years: the musicians, scholars, community organizers, and visionaries who are helping support, shape, and preserve mariachi today. Several scholars and researchers pointed me to valuable sources and helped shape this project. In this respect, thanks in particular are due to Jeff Nevin, Jonathan Clark, Daniel Sheehy, Mark Fogelquist, Russell Rodríguez, and Juanita Ulloa. I also wish to express my gratitude to the US-Mexico Border Philanthropy Partnership in San Diego for funding that made this research possible and to Edward E. Marsh for his continued support of this project and mariachi education, both in the United States and Mexico. Finally, I am deeply thankful to Mervyn Cooke, editor of the “Music Since 1945” series, for feedback and shepherding this Element through to publication.
I dedicate this work to the next generation of mariachi musicians and mariachi studies scholars. The future is interdisciplinary and bright – and it is yours.
Mervyn Cooke
University of Nottingham
Mervyn Cooke brings to the role of series editor an unusually broad range of expertise, having published widely in the fields of twentieth-century opera, concert and theatre music, jazz, and film music. He has edited and co-edited Cambridge Companions to Britten, Jazz, Twentieth-Century Opera, and Film Music. His other books include Britten: War Requiem, Britten and the Far East, A History of Film Music, The Hollywood Film Music Reader, Pat Metheny: The ECM Years, and two illustrated histories of jazz. He is currently co-editing (with Christopher R. Wilson) The Oxford Handbook of Shakespeare and Music.
About the Series
Elements in Music Since 1945 is a highly stimulating collection of authoritative online essays that reflects the latest research into a wide range of musical topics of international significance since the Second World War. Individual Elements are organised into constantly evolving clusters devoted to such topics as art music, jazz, music and image, stage and screen genres, music and media, music and place, immersive music, music and movement, music and politics, music and conflict, and music and society. The latest research questions in theory, criticism, musicology, composition and performance are also given cutting-edge and thought-provoking coverage. The digital-first format allows authors to respond rapidly to new research trends, with contributions being updated to reflect the latest thinking in their fields, and the essays are enhanced by the provision of an exciting range of online resources.