Ep. 41: Celebrate Cinco de Mayo with a look at how music preserves Mexican heritage and connects cultures, with Eugene Rodriguez

May 5, 2020

Music can preserve culture and be a bridge between cultures. Celebrate Cinco de Mayo with a look at some of the ways music is used to celebrate Mexican history and traditions, as well as promote intercultural connection.

Guest

Today is Cinco de Mayo, and my guest is Eugene Rodriguez, founder of Los Cenzontles. Los Cenzontles is an award-winning California non-profit that started with the idea that connecting young people to art and their cultural roots empowers them to build on the past to create a better future. Los Cenzontles is a band, a nonprofit organization, a music academy, a community space for youth and families, and a hub for Latino artists – all working together to celebrate and preserve Mexican heritage and culture, through music.

Notes

(quotes are from https://www.loscenzontles.com/)

  • Los Cenzontles (LC) fosters creative cross cultural collaboration with masters of blues, bluegrass, zydeco, rock, and Irish roots musicians.
  • Woven throughout all these activities are themes of inclusion, education, and social justice.
  • LC events feature performances by their students, their own professional touring group, and well-known world musicians and visiting artists.
  • Los Cenzontles means “The Mockingbirds”
  • Nationwide, the Latino population is nearly 70% of Mexican-origin.
  • LC instills a “sense of cultural pride and participation in living traditions.”
  • LC remains “unique among non-profits nationally in demonstrating the potential of Latino cultural programming and production to transform individuals and communities from within.”
  • LC media productions capture its journey in documentary series, web-based video shorts, and “digital scrapbooks” that capture Mexican American stories of resilience.
  • LC is a second home for many families.
  • As Americans, we all are indirect beneficiaries of LC’s work: “Los Cenzontles has demonstrated that artistic quality and accessibility to the arts can and must co-exist in working class, ethnic communities to ensure the democratization of American identity. For that reason, non-profits across the country have looked to Los Cenzontles as a model of successful arts education. Of course, the students, many who come from disadvantaged backgrounds economically, are the immediate beneficiaries. But by inspiring creative engagement by the America’s Latino population, the work of Los Cenzontles stands to benefit the entire nation.”

Improv

Eugene recommends thinking about a song that was sung to you by an adult when you were a child – and that you would sing to a child as an adult. Consider the role that song plays in your life.

Connect

  • Hay Unos Ojos: Released April 15, 2020; a classic Mexican ranchera using social distancing:

Coda

Linda Ronstadt has been a Los Cenzontles supporter and friend since 1993. Linda was a successful and influential artist in her native Mexico before becoming well known in the US. Listen to the audio of Ronstadt’s “Play Por Un Amor (For A Love)” from this YouTube video. If you click through the link to play the video on the YouTube site, be sure to check out the comments people have left – it’s really touching to see the ways this song and artist have impacted the lives of so many people!

 

Closing Words

Linda Ronstadt’s “Por Un Amor” (For A Love) is included on her album, Canciones De Mi Padre (Songs for my Father). I am a little behind the curve when it comes to technology toys, but I have to say that I am a recent convert and huge fan of wireless earbuds! My teenagers have both gotten some in the last several months, so I was already eyeing them with some interest, and then my husband got a new phone that came with free wireless earbuds, and he graciously allowed me to hijack them! I have to tell you, if you are quarantined in a house with several other people, they are THE BEST. My kids can be playing their own music, or FaceTiming a friend or practicing the piano, or on a Zoom call, and I can just pop those earbuds in and listen to my own music or catch up on podcasts – especially now that I’m not spending hardly any time in the car anymore. And if I’m working on something that doesn’t require a lot of mental bandwidth, like laundry or yardwork or cooking, I can get my podcast fix AND I’m amazed at how fast the time goes. So I definitely recommend the wireless earbuds! Smart speakers have also been getting a lot of love recently with so many of us home all the time. If you have a smart speaker, remember: you can listen to this show by saying, “Alexa [or Hey Google], play Enhance Life with Music podcast.”Thank you, listeners, for joining me today. Stay safe, stay healthy, and until next week, may your life be enhanced with music.  Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Some of this site’s product links are affiliate links, which means we may receive a small commission, at no extra cost to you, for purchases made through these links. 

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