YouTubes to make your Mexican grandmother cry
If anyone in your family was born in Mexico in the early part of the last century, drag your laptop over to them, pack a few hankies, and turn up the sound.
Even if you do not have a Mexican grannie, you may still enjoy these video clips from the "golden age" of Mexican popular music: boleros, rancheras, huapangos and rumbas from artists who were popular from the '20s through the '50s. The sound quality in each is almost as bad as the video -- I sure wish there were better-res versions of these, and more of them, online.
"Veracruz music was heavily influenced by Cuban music in the 1940's - 1950's for two reasons:Here's an even older and more rare clip of la Negra singing "Clave de Oro" in 1934, in the Mexican film "Payasadas De la Vida." In the 1948 film "Revancha," she interprets the Agustin Lara composition "Oracion Caribe." Here's a much later version of that same song, on a TV variety show. Here's a music blog post that points to an entire album of hers, in download form.1. The commercial relationship due to the geographical proximity between the island and the Eastern coast of Mexico, favored the cultural exchange.2. When Veracruz people turned on their radio, they could only hear Cuban radio stations, since Mexico City's radio stations couldn't reach the East coast, due to the Sierra Madre mountains. (This my mom tells me about it, when she was a child)
Here's "La Negra Noche," from that same film. Note that she is wearing a sash of bullets.
Here's la Lola, sola, singing "La Cigarra," with one of those otherworldy falsetto passages that makes the hair on the back of your neck stand up. Here she is in a ballroom gown singing Adorado Tormento, here's Cucurrucucu Paloma in an even more ostentatious outfit. Here's "Me Allegro Mucho," from another very old movie. Of all the clips I found with Beltran, my favorite is "Estoy Apunto de Llorar" (I'm on the verge of crying), for the super duper over the top melodrama.
One YouTube uploader has created a bunch of Chavela Vargas clips (1, 2, 3) that consist of earlier recordings and a black screen -- kind of boring to watch, but the sound quality's not bad, and these are some of her greatest hits (back when her booze-soaked voice was a little stronger). Here's a downloadable album in MP3 form, here's another. It is said that she once got it on with Frida Kahlo (for real). To paraphrase Chuck Norris Facts, The chief export of Chavela Vargas is Dolor.
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