Mexican jazz

Mexican jazz is the given name for the jazz created by Mexicans or in Mexico since the 1920s, although there were isolated cases even in the genesis of the jazz genre itself.

Mexican big bands

Mexico is linked to the big band format. The main reason has to do with the settlement of the famous Cuban Dámaso Pérez Prado, who lived in Mexico from 1949 until his death in 1989.

The Mexican actor, orchestra director, and singer Luis Arcaraz was called Mexico's Jazz King by RKO-Pathé. In 1955, Down Beat magazine positioned Arcaraz's band as number four around the world.

Mexican jazz bars

Before the rise of a new wave of jazz festivals in Mexico, the main venues for jazz were bars, restaurants and nightclubs. Some of the venues are:

  • Bar Nueva Orleans
  • El Convite
  • Parker & Lenox
  • Jazzorca
  • Las musas de Papá Sibarita

Mexican jazz boom

Due to the impact of globalization, around 2010, Mexican jazz began to flourish as never before. There are many reasons for this boom including:

  • Internet popularisation
  • The end of the supremacy of music companies
  • A strong overall design of national tours done by jazz players and jazz managers
  • Mexican jazz players performing outside the country on a regular basis
  • The saturation of massive genres
  • Social media as a showcase
  • The birth of websites specialised in Mexican jazz that encourages jazz journalism
  • The opening of bachelor degrees specialising in jazz, and the emergence of schools teaching popular music
  • The supply of Mexican jazz TV series on open television
  • The media conquest carry out by jazz players, jazz managers, and critics
  • New wave of jazz festivals around the country
  • The opening of more jazz clubs and the possibility to play this genre in different bars

Mexican jazz in the media

Polytrops AC filming Resilience for a Note, the first Mexican Jazz film (2011)

Almost all the 20th century Mexican Jazz was poorly represented in the media with the exception of the radio. But since 2012 it has been gaining ground.


gollark: Hmm. I think what my instruction set needs is C O N C U R R E N C Y.
gollark: Idea: add `no-op (atomic)` to scare people off using the regular `NOP`.
gollark: So you just randomly broke them into 6 bytes a line even though it's 2 bytes an instruction?
gollark: Wait, are your instructions 48 bits?
gollark: I could add random undocumented instructions so people can have fun with sandsifter-type stuff too, what could possibly go wrong.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.