Tag: Los Cenzontles Academy

New Audio: Los Cenzontles Shares Defiantly Hopeful “Somos Semillas”

Deriving their name from the Nahuatl word for mockingbird, the Richmond, CA-based Los Cenzontles (pronounced senn-SONT-less) — is an acclaimed touring and recording band and a nonprofit cultural arts academy for kids. Over their three-plus decade history, the recording and touring outfit has dug deep into cultural traditions, creating a vibrant, contemporary sound infused with the gutsy soul of Mexico’s rural roots, recording and releasing over 30 albums. 

The collective have supported those albums with tours across the US, Europe, the Dominican Republic, Cuba and Mexico. And they’ve collaborated with an eclectic array of acclaimed, internationally recognized artists including The Chieftains, Los Lobos, Los Tigres del Norte, Ry Cooder, David Hidalgo, Linda Ronstadt, Taj Mahal and a lengthy list of others. 

Their core members of the recording and touring band also serve as the programming staff and teachers of Los Cenzontles Academy, where they have been passing on musical traditions to new generations and inviting their students to perform with them on stage and participate in production projects since 1994. 

The acclaimed collective’s latest single “Somos Semillas,” is the first of five new singles that they’ll be sharing this month. Written in Spanish by longtime member of Los Cenzontles, Verenice Velázquez, the track is performed by a unique cross-generational ensemble of Los Cenzontles Academy’s students, teachers and alumni, including a spoken-word recitation by Raúl Rivera, a 15-year old student, accompanied by Verenice dancing zapateado; and a Hector Espinoza-written arrangement performed by 18-year old Camila Ortega on quijada, a percussion instrument made from the dried and hollowed-out jawbone of a donkey, horse, mule or a cow, in which the animal’s teeth act like a rattle; 19 year-old Daniel Ortega on tuba and saxophones; 19 year-old Cruz Torres on accordion; 16 year-old Natalie Caldera on bass; 16 year-old Joshua Cerecedo on tololoche, a Mexican version of a double bass that’s smaller than the European double bass that’s traditionally played with a percussive, slapping technique; 17 year-old Eric Garcia on 12-string guitar; Los Cenzontles alumni Fidel Lopez on trombone; and Los Cenzontles faculty members Silvestre Martinez on cajon, a box-shaped percussive instrument that the player sits on and plays by tapping and/or slapping the front and near-facing sides; and Eugene Rodríguez on guitar.

The arrangement fuses elements of son jarocho, corrido tumbado and banda to create a sound that lovingly and proudly bridges generations, heritage and traditions, while being remarkably contemporary. The song’s lyrics touch on themes of community, migration, resilience and hope in a way that’s desperately needed in such dark, uneasy times. It’s reminder that joy, hope and pride in your heritage can be defiant and revolutionary in the face of rampant racism and fascism.

“This song represents the heart of Los Cenzontles . . . young people rooted in deep tradition, expressing themselves in ways that feel current and alive,” Los Cenzontles founder and Eugune Rodríguez says. “’Somos Semillas’ reminds us that our culture continues to grow and thrive through each new generation.”

Deriving their name from the Nahuatl word for The Mockingbirds, the Richmond, CA-based Los Cenzontles (pronounced senn-SONT-less) — is an acclaimed touring and recording band and nonprofit cultural arts academy for kids. Over their three-plus decade history, the recording and touring outfit has dug deep into cultural traditions, creating a vibrant, contemporary sound infused with the gutsy soul of Mexico’s rural roots, releasing over 30 albums. 

The collective have supported those albums with tours across the US, Europe, the Dominican Republic, Cuba and Mexico. And they’ve collaborated with an eclectic array of acclaimed, internationally recognized artists including The Chieftains, Los Lobos, Los Tigres del Norte, Ry Cooder, David Hidalgo, Linda Ronstadt, Taj Mahal and a lengthy list of others. 

Their core members also serve as the programming staff and teachers of Los Cenzontles Academy, where they have been passing on musical traditions to new generations and inviting their students to perform with them on stage and participate in production projects since 1994. 

Released earlier this year, the Richmond, CA-based outfit’s remarkable 33rd album Son Con Son, En el Suelo Americano sees the prolific collective collaborating with son jarocho masters Grupo Mono Blanco and Cuban cuatro master Kiki Valera to create material that meshes Cuban Son cubano with Son jarocho from the Mexican state of Veracruz. 

Over the past couple of months I’ve written about two album singles”

The Mono Blanco-penned “Matanga,” a virtuosic and shimmering mesh of Mexican folk and Cuban folk cultures built around an arrangement that features Cuban congas; Zapeteado de tarima, a percussive drum-like instrument that you tap your feet on; quijada, a percussive instrument made from the jawbone of a donkey, cow, horse or mule that’s cleaned of tissue and dried out, so that the loose teeth rattle when struck with a fist; jarocho jarana, an eight-stringed guitar-meets-mandolin-like instrument with the strings in five courses — usually arranged in two outer strings with three double-courses in between; requinto, a smaller, higher-pitched version of a guitar, and used throughout much of Latin America; cuatro cubano, another mandolin-meets-guitar-like instrument that can be single-stringed, double coursed or tripled coursed paired with Mano Blanco’s soulful delivery singing lyrics that tackle the universal themes of love and loss. 

“Matanga” was rooted in a unfussy production that captures remarkable musicianship and old-fashioned craftsmanship with the immediacy, familiarity and playfulness of a bunch of friends jamming together on the porch on a Sunday afternoon, playing the beloved old songs and finding something new every single time.

Como un Perro” is a slow-burning and shimmering ballad that meshes both Cuban and Mexican folk traditions that sounds like the salsa, meringue and bachata ballads.

Son Con Son, En el Suelo Americano‘s latest single “Sobre Una Tumba, Una Rumba” is a great old standard that sees the prolific Californians collaborating with Group Mono Blanco and Kiki Valera. The new single continues a remarkable run of material rooted in virtuosic and soulful playing, an unfussy yet clean production that captures an you’re-in-the-room immediacy while seamlessly meshing Cuban and Mexican folk traditions in a way that bring back fond memories of my own childhood here in Queens.

Deriving their name from the Nahuatl for The Mockingbirds, the Richmond, CA-based Los Cenzontles (pronounced senn-SONT-less) — is an acclaimed touring and recording band and nonprofit cultural arts academy for kids. Over their three-plus decade history, the recording and touring outfit has dug deep into cultural traditions, creating a vibrant, contemporary sound infused with the gutsy soul of Mexico’s rural roots, releasing over 30 albums. 

The collective have supported those albums with tours across the US, Europe, the Dominican Republic, Cuba and Mexico. And they’ve collaborated with an eclectic array of acclaimed, internationally recognized artists including The Chieftains, Los Lobos, Los Tigres del Norte, Ry Cooder, David Hidalgo, Linda Ronstadt, Taj Mahal and a lengthy list of others. 

Their core members also serve as the programming staff and teachers of Los Cenzontles Academy, where they have been passing on musical traditions to new generations and inviting their students to perform with them on stage and participate in production projects since 1994. 

The Richmond-based outfit’s remarkable 33rd album,  Son Con Son, En el Suelo Americano was released earlier this month. The album sees the collective collaborating with son jarocho masters Grupo Mono Blanco and Cuban cuatro master Kiki Valera to create material that meshes Cuban Son cubano with Son jarocho from the Mexican state of Veracruz.

Last month, I wrote about the Mono Blanco-penned album track “Matanga,” a virtuosic and shimmering mesh of Mexican folk and Cuban folk cultures built around an arrangement that features Cuban congas; Zapeteado de tarima, a percussive drum-like instrument that you tap your feet on; quijada, a percussive instrument made from the jawbone of a donkey, cow, horse or mule that’s cleaned of tissue and dried out, so that the loose teeth rattle when struck with a fist; jarocho jarana, an eight-stringed guitar-meets-mandolin-like instrument with the strings in five courses — usually arranged in two outer strings with three double-courses in between; requinto, a smaller, higher-pitched version of a guitar, and used throughout much of Latin America; cuatro cubano, another mandolin-meets-guitar-like instrument that can be single-stringed, double coursed or tripled coursed paired with Mano Blanco’s soulful delivery singing lyrics that tackle the universal themes of love and loss. 

“Matanga” was rooted in a unfussy production that captures remarkable musicianship and old-fashioned craftsmanship with the immediacy, familiarity and playfulness of a bunch of friends jamming together on the porch on a Sunday afternoon, playing the beloved old songs and finding something new every single time.

Son Con Son, En el Suelo Americano‘s latest single “Como un Perro” is a slow-burning and shimmering ballad that meshes both Cuban and Mexican folk traditions that sounds like the salsa, meringue and bachata ballads I grew up listening to in Corona, Queens, NYC — while being rooted in soulful, earnest performances and virtuosic playing.