World Music Showcase: The Latin American Ensemble
![The Latin American Ensemble performs in Grusin Music Hall on Sunday, April 22, at 4:30 p.m.](/music/sites/default/files/styles/medium_750px_50_display_size_/public/article-image/latin_american.jpg?itok=JhYpIHBK)
The Latin American Ensemble performs in Grusin Music Hall on Sunday, April 22, at 4:30 p.m.
Every year, the College of Music welcomes the spring thaw with a celebration of music outside the classic western canon. This April, the annual showcase of world music features a performance by the Latin American Ensemble on Sunday, April 22.
The ensemble, which changed its name this year from the Mariachi Ensemble as its repertoire continues to evolve, is made up of mostly non-music majors and performs traditional music from around the Americas, including 梭喝釵喝鳥穩 spiritual songs with Afro-Cuban Bata drumming accompaniment.
We will end with a little rumba thats so catchy that everybodys going to love it, says Professor of Ethnomusicology Brenda Romero, who helps lead the group.
Longtime Mariachi Ensemble director Francisco Chino Rodr穩guez now co-directs the Latin American Ensemble with Romero, guest bandleader Alonzo Bejarano and teaching assistant Zane Cupec, who are helping to change instrumentation resources to include more Afrolatino sounds.
We started as the Latin American Ensemble years ago, Romero recalls, but then we started playing more and more mariachi so we changed the name. But its difficult to do mariachi because you need very particular instruments.
A major goal of the Latin American Ensemble, Romero explains, is that the music be accessible for all listeners and playable for musicians of all levels. The musical traditions of Central and South America were passed down through communal performance, and the ensemble will continue that.
The point of the world music ensembles is to get students to experience making music that is more welcoming to people who arent trained. Everybody should have the opportunity to make music, no matter what level of musician they are.
On the program is泭an array of pieces celebrating the Afrolatino musical connection in Latin America and the Caribbean, including a fast-paced joropo from Venezuela, ballads featuring student soloists, and two pieces with guests the Rom獺n D穩az Afro-Cuban Ensemble. Romero will also perform with junior soprano Julieta Garc穩a on the piece Garc穩a sang with Mexican artist Lila Downs during her March 3 Artist Series concert.
The broad range of cultures represented on the program is symbolic of the role the Latin American Ensemble can play in expanding students and concertgoers definition of what music means.
Music making itself is critical in todays society. Music is one of the only things that calms people down, Romero says. Musicians and music making have a huge role to play in making things better.
The Latin American Ensemble takes the Grusin Music Hall stage at 4:30 p.m. on Sunday, April 22. Their appearance will be followed by a bonus performance after the concert with the Rom獺n D穩az Afro-Cuban Ensemble. That泭concert begins at 7:30 p.m. in the Old Main Chapel, with a reception following at 9泭p.m. at泭Koenig Alumni Center. If you really want to get your world music fix, come early for the Japanese Ensemble concert at 2 p.m. in Grusin Hall. Find more information at .