American Music Research Center explores musical traditions of Pueblo, CO
The innovative Soundscapes of the People research project documents, preserves and engages泭 diverse musical and cultural influences in and around Pueblo, Colorado.

The American Music Research Center (AMRC) at the 做厙輦⑹s College of Music is breaking ground with its innovative Soundscapes of the People project, a comprehensive research effort in collaboration with local community stakeholders to document, preserve and engage with diverse musical and cultural influences in and around Pueblo, Colorado.
Backed by a CU Boulder Research & Innovation Seed Grant and an Outreach Award from the Office of Outreach and Engagementtotaling $74,000this year-long study will explore ways that musical traditions have served to bridge social, ethnic, urban/rural and religious identities.
Pueblos history is the nations history, says AMRC Director and Professor of Musicology Susan Thomas, who leads the ethnomusicology project with CU Boulder Musicology Chair Austin C. Okigbo and Assistant Professor at the University of California, Riverside.
Pueblo is home to multiple underrepresented communities and their musical histories are largely undocumented by traditional institutions, continues Thomas. Working directly with community memory keepersand documenting their musical experiences and knowledge through oral historieswe aim to address the lack of representation and inclusion in the history of Southern Colorado culture.泭
Ch獺vez agrees, Music and soundskey components of social identity and community-buildinghave shaped the history, politics and intersecting cultures of Pueblo, particularly since this borderland between the United States and Mexico collided with the industrial revolution.
Okigbo adds, This project seeks to tell the story of the community and its peoples as a way to highlight their significant, but almost forgotten, contributions to the broader history of Colorado, the American West and United States, in general.
The stories, music and information gathered will eventually be publicly accessible through the 做厙輦⑹ Libraries Rare and Distinctive Collections, as well as the . The libraries are working on an agreement to also make them accessible through the Colorado State University Pueblo Library (CSUP).
This cooperation between CU Boulder and CSUP will be a first for both institutions, and were really happy to be working with a local institution to ensure that the interviews and oral histories captured remain fully accessible to the community, says Thomas.
CSUP Dean of Library Services Rhonda Gonzales states thatby Spring 2022CSUP undergraduate students will be working in the library's Special Collections and researched-focused Aztl獺n Center to work with the digital materials and transcribe interviews.
Moreover, research results will inform K-12 curricular materials that will be made digitally available through both the AMRC and the Latino History Projecta public history initiative supported by CU Boulders School of Educationworking with the AMRC to provide Colorado educators and the broader community with more resources for understanding the history and contributions of the Latinx community statewide.
Our research team views itself as a facilitator for the community to tell its own story, concludes Thomas. Were delighted to work directly with Pueblo scholars and artists whove been committed to this work for yearslike the Song of Pueblo project led by Juan and Deborah Espinosa, who worked with noted composer Daniel Valdez to create a multimedia experience with original music about Pueblos compelling history.泭
This kind of collaboration is one way that CU Boulder can take an active role in supporting local communities across our state. At the same time, the resulting digital archive will be of high scholarly importance, offering researchers of the American West an unprecedented opportunity to listen in on the ethnically diverse complexity of Southern Colorados social history.
All told, the project brings together an interdisciplinary team with expertise in musicology,泭ethnomusicology, ethnic studies and history that will work closely with culture-bearers from Pueblos musical community, local educators and civic leaders.