New Search
If you are not happy with the results below please do another search
Blog Post
Justo a tiempo para la Extravaganza del Mariachi Vargas en diciembre pasado, Daniel Martínez, integrante por muchos años del Mariachi Vargas de Tecalitlán, lanzó su primer disco compacto como solista, que se titula Mundo Viejo y se subtitula De México Para el Mundo… Un Nuevo Compositor, en el cual se destaca como cantautor. En este artículo, Jonathan Clark entrevista a Daniel sobre su reciente lanzamiento, un CD que sería de interés para todos los aficionados al mariachi. JC: Oye, Daniel. Hace muchos años, cuando yo te conocí, todavía no componías canciones. ¿Cómo surgió esta fase de tu trayectoria?...
read more →
Blog Post
Daniel Martínez nació en Saltillo, Coahuila el 29 de septiembre de 1956. No hubo músicos en su familia directa. A la edad de 11 años, un tío político le enseñó a tocar vihuela, y poco después hizo su debut con un mariachi. A los 15 años fue a Monterrey, Nuevo León, donde trabajó como vihuelista con varios grupos, cambiándose después al guitarrón. (more…)
Blog Post
This is the fifth profile in a series of blogs written by mariachi historian Jonathan Clark on current members of Mariachi Vargas de Tecalitlán. This profile features Daniel Martínez, longtime vocalist and violinist for Mariachi Vargas. Daniel Martínez was born on September 29, 1956 in Saltillo, Coahuila, to a family of non-musicians. An uncle-by-marriage taught him to play the vihuela at age 11, and soon after, he made his debut in a mariachi. At age 14, he moved to Monterrey, Nuevo León, where he played vihuela with several groups, and eventually switched to guitarrón. (more…)
Blog Post
Click here to listen to the original recording of "Nola" by Mariachi Vargas de Tecalitlán, with Miguel Martínez as trumpet soloist Experience the Splendor of the Mariachi Trumpet with Mariachi Vargas’ most recent trumpet player, Fernando Velásquez, and the group’s very first trumpeter, Miguel Martínez. Mariachi Vargas trumpeter Fernando Velásquez joins mariachi historian Jonathan Clark in an intergenerational tribute to maestro Miguel Martínez, who in 1942 became the first trumpeter to join Mariachi Vargas. (more…)
Blog Post
This is the second posting of a series of profiles written by mariachi historian Jonathan Clark on current members of Mariachi Vargas. Profiles will be posted on Mariachimusic.com blogs leading up to the 19th Annual Mariachi Vargas Extravaganza, Dec. 1-7. Fernando Velásquez was born in the Altos de Jalisco town of Tepatitlán de Morelos, where his father, itinerant mariachi trumpet player José Martín Velásquez, happened to be working at the time. Shortly afterward, the Valásquez family moved to Guadalajara, where Fernando spent most of his early childhood. “Although I consider Guadalajara my hometown,” he says, “most of my life I’ve...
read more →
Blog Post
In my March 10 blog, “Covid-19 takes toll on mariachi community,” I spoke about the scarcity of mariachi work during the pandemic, ending on the optimistic note that “the light at the end of the tunnel is already visible.” Well, a lot has changed over the last two months. Not only has mariachi work returned, but it has returned in record proportions. Virtually every mariachi musician and group leader I’ve spoken to coincides that there was more work this past May than any of us had previously seen in our lifetimes, and some of us have been playing this music...
read more →
Blog Post
En octubre del año pasado (2020), volví a tener el placer de entrevistar a Carlos Martínez, esta vez para una nueva serie de podcasts que ofrece gratuitamente mariachimusic.com. Dado que habían pasado casi siete años desde que él se unió al Mariachi Vargas en 2014, pensé que éste sería un momento oportuno para repasar su carrera musical y actualizarla. Mi lista de preguntas abarcaba desde sus primeras experiencias musicales hasta sus últimas producciones con el Vargas. Tal como esperaba de este músico observador e introspectivo por excelencia, la entrevista fue amena e informativa. “¡Qué bien salió!”, exclamó Carlos cuando le...
read more →
Blog Post
Miguel Hernández, the charismatic violinist best known as “La Pulga” (the flea), succumbed to coronavirus last December at age 70. From the time I met him in Plaza Garibaldi back in the late 1970s, I found Miguel's account of how he helped pioneer the mariachi mass compelling. He described to me how, as a member of the Cuernavaca-based Mariachi Hermanos Macías, a French Canadian priest named Jean Marc Leclerc had lent their mariachi an 8-track tape cartridge of religious folk music from Mexico, Chile, and Brazil — all from the bishop's personal record collection — recorded in the canonical sequence...
read more →
Blog Post
El día primero de este año, el covid–19 cobró otra vida más, esta vez la de nuestra amiga Cassandra Trejo, quien fue muy conocida en el ambiente de los festivales de mariachi. Cassandra Clemence o “Cassy”, como muchos le decían, nació en 1963 en el pueblo de Ruidoso, Nuevo México. Se crió en Hobbs, Nuevo México, pero vivió la mayor parte de su vida en Midland, Texas. Ella contaba que había conocido la música de mariachi a través de la televisión a la edad de 18 años, y que aprendió el español expresamente para poderla cantar. Solía decir: “Me enamoré...
read more →
Blog Post
On New Year’s Day of 2021, Covid-19 took another life, this time that of our dear friend Cassandra Trejo, a well-known personality in the mariachi festival world. Cassandra Clemence was born in 1963 in the town of Ruidoso, New Mexico. She grew up in Hobbs, New Mexico, but lived most of her life in Midland, Texas. By her own testimony, "Cassy," as many called her, became familiar with mariachi music through television at the age of 18, and learned Spanish expressly to be able to sing it. As she would often say: "I fell in love with Mexico, its music,...
read more →
« Previous Page — Next Page »