蜜桃传媒破解版下载

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The Music of Pueblo

Pueblo Musicians

Susan Thomas and X贸chitl Ch谩vez with musicians Sam Medina and Gilbert Medina.听

X贸chitl Ch谩vez (LatinAmer, SpanLit鈥02) grew up in Pueblo, Colorado's east side听in a life rich with cultural heritage.听听听

鈥淪ummertime meant church festivals and street parades," said Ch谩vez, who was a member of Pueblo's youth marching band programs. 鈥淭here was always some sort of music being played.鈥澨

Working as a young, bilingual radio personality in the city, she learned of the diverse historic music venues that served as hubs where long-term Pueblo residents and migrant workers united. The importance of these hubs has stayed with her as she studies cultural anthropology and ethnomusicology.听

Ch谩vez is now the first Chicana tenure track assistant professor in the music department at the University of California, Riverside.听For the past year, she鈥檚 partnered with 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 on a research project, 鈥淪oundscapes of the People,鈥 that blends her work and heritage.听听

In 2019, Ch谩vez met Susan Thomas, director of CU鈥檚 American Music Research Center, who was seeking a research project to focus on the diversity of Colorado鈥檚 music histories. Ch谩vez encouraged her to start interviewing musicians in Pueblo.

鈥淚 was hooked,鈥 said Thomas. 鈥淭he thing that has really struck me is how fascinating Pueblo is as a city. It鈥檚 unlike any place I鈥檝e ever been.鈥澨

Thomas 鈥 also the College of Music鈥檚 associate dean of diversity, equity and inclusion 鈥 secured grants to study and preserve the history of music in Pueblo and surrounding areas, and began interviews in 2021.听

By the end of the project, Thomas, Ch谩vez and a team of three graduate students will have spoken to about 80 musicians and community members for the project, some of whom have played in Pueblo for nearly 70 years.听

鈥淟ooking at music and sound is a powerful way to consider how Puebloans have built resilient communities and social identities,鈥 said Thomas.听

One particular elder, Sam Medina, known for his improvised songs called 鈥渧ersos,鈥 helped coordinate interviews with musicians in their 80s, even at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.

In April 2022, the team secured a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities to continue the research through 2025. The interviews, music and stories collected will be publicly available through CU鈥檚 digital library and CSU Pueblo.听

Said Thomas: 鈥淭he American West has been really understudied. This is an opportunity to change the narrative about how people have made music and why it matters.鈥

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Photos courtesy听X贸chitl Ch谩vez