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Mexican party music. Two extremes in one weekend.

I experienced two extremes – I guess that is the right word – of Mexican party music this past

weekend. One was a very talented rock and roll band that put aside their star-studded history and

played party covers dedicated o 70’s and 80’s American rock music, and the other one was a

local Mexican party band playing at a friend’s birthday party near my house.

The rock and roll band, Mr. Que, played in a relatively large outdoor venue known as 4toSentido,

actually a restaurant on top of what used to be an elevated driving range looking out over the

Lake. The band consists of brothers Fernando, Carlos, Hector, and Germán Quintana who have

played separately for years to develop their own styles and skills and then reunited in one very

together and enthusiastic four-piece rock band in Guadalajara.

Each of the brothers is multi-instrumental and can and does compose as well as play. The band’s

founder, brother Fernando, has postgraduate training in keyboards from the LA. Musicians

Institute, has been a session artist for Maná, and arranged, produced, and directed music for

Marin Valverde Rojas, Sheila Rios, and the Jalisco Philharmonic Orchestra. The other brothers

each have similar star-studded careers, including gigs at Madison Square Garden and the White

House with Barack Obama. And opening for or playing with many top Latin bands.

The audience for this gig was mostly retired Expats and a few Mexican families looking for fun

and dancing, so the music was distinctly American and distinctly 70’s, and 80’s (with a few

Beatle songs thrown in). They nailed it; the audience loved it, filled the dance floor for the high

tempo pieces, and yelled “otra!” when it was time for the band to leave – which they did finally

after a few “otras”. I know they could have played their own songs in Spanish, but that is not

what the audience wanted, and the mark of a good band is to understand the audience

I will have to catch their original in Guadalajara.

The local party band was called La Misma Banda – “The Same Band” in English; ( I guess if

you ask someone what band played for you they would answer “the same band”). La Misma

Banda played what I have learned is the party music of our area of Mexico – maybe in other

places too, but I have no comparison. The band consists of a singer, drummer – usually with a

pair of floor toms bracketed by a marching bass drum and one or two snare drums, trombones,

tuba, trumpets including a Dizzy Gillespie-style jazz trumpet, and a percussionist.

The music is generally led by the tuba backed by very loud snare drumming and the horns

providing a brass melody that is anything but melodious. To an American ear, it is chaos, with

nothing in key, little coordination, and very, very loud. But, once you understand what is going

on, it is fun. The point is not to produce beautiful, harmonious music that swings and sways

your heart, but to generate an atmosphere of fun – no seriousness allowed, just fun.

LA MISMA BANDA 2

La Misma Banda is 14 men and women who know how to turn any event into a party. Since this

was a birthday party, to begin with, that was no problem. The party took place at the birthday

girl’s two-level home. On the lower level is a carport which was cleared out for a portable taco

kitchen and cooks, plus tables and chairs. The carport opened to a dirt side street, so the kids

(there were about 30 of them) could run in and out and play, and more importantly, the band could

pull up to the source of tacos and unload their equipment.

LA  BANDA MISMA 3

They carried everything around through the front door on the upper level, organized themselves

and, with a downbeat from the tuba, marched in, winding their way through the guest tables, the

marching drum booming, the tuba booming, the trumpets blaring, the trombone sliding, and the

lead singer belting a popular Mexican song on a radio mic.

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The band continued, with speeches and happy birthdays interspersed between songs. And of

course moms and kids danced.

Mr. Q. and La Banda Misma came from similar roots and had the same mission – to make a

party and the people in it happy. Their audiences were different, and the music was very

different, but they both succeeded. While I could – and did – dance to Mr. Q, and not to La

Banda Misma, I enjoyed them both realizing that to understand the broad range of Mexican

party music, you need an open mind as well as open ears

Patrick O’Heffernan, PhD., is a music journalist and radio broadcaster based in Los Angeles, California, with a global following. His two weekly radio programs, MusicFridayLive! and MusicaFusionLA are heard nationwide and in the UK. He focuses on two music specialties: emerging bands in all genres, and the growing LA-based ALM genre (American Latino Music) that combines rock and rap, blues and jazz and pop with music from Latin America like cumbia, banda, jarocho and mariachi. He also likes to watch his friend drag race.

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