If so, why? What person sits in a restaurant, enjoying conversations with friends and family, all while secretly thinking, “You know what would make this moment complete? A deafening trumpet blast, right in my ear.”
I can take or leave most mariachi music at a distance, or at an outdoor festival, but an indoor trumpet, in a setting where people are trying to talk? Really? Someone explain to me why mariachi bands exist.
If only there were a country somewhere, where people play and enjoy ethnic music, and if said style of music also came from said country…
That said, there is a group, “Mariachi El Bronx” who does a contemporary English version of it. I like that ok, but not so much the stereo blasting kind. BTW, this band normally just play hardcore punk (under the name “the Bronx”).
Oh, and there are other genres of similar Mexican music, like norteño, which will sound similar to my ears, but I’m sure there are subtle differences in instrumentation, etc. So what you hear as mariachi may be something else.
I love good Mariachi music. The band in one long-ago all-night Mexican place in Houston kept the trumpet player stuck in a corner, to avoid blasting out diners’ ears. For wandering minstrels in Mexican restaurants, I prefer the trio style, with guitars & romantic harmonies. Mariachis fit better in a really big place where much tequila is drunk & the people are happy to be there. (Let me guess–you don’t care for Mexican/Tex-Mex food, either.)
Went to a wedding a few weeks ago. The grooms side was a big traditional Mexican family. They had Mariachi music and it was just great! What fun it was.
One of my best memories from 35 years ago is sitting near Lake Amatitlan in Guatemala, eating boiled shrimp, drinking Cabro, watching the young women frolic, and paying a mariachi band a few bucks to play everything they knew.
I’m with Bridget. You need to have another Margarita and chill out. Consider yourself lucky that you don’t live in some culturally deprived part of the country.
In the right setting, with a good group, mariachi music can’t be beat. It’s not something that I want to hear constantly, but I enjoy it in small doses.
In fact, I’m going to a little Mexican restaurant tonight specifically because they’ll be having a trio of musicians wandering around the place. They play more country than traditional Mexican tunes, and generally I don’t like country, but they’re good. Again, it’s not something that I want to hear all the time, but every now and then…
Yup, from San Antonio. If I lived in Ohio, I doubt I’d have an issue with mariachi music one way or another.
I love the culture of my city. I like Tejano music just fine. I just don’t happen to love showing up to a restaurant, only to have all hopes of good dinner conversation drown out by trumpet playing three feet away. And I can’t imagine why anyone would enjoy that.