Music Community, Improvisation, and Social Technologies in COVID-Era Música Huasteca
Abstract
This article examines two interrelated aspects of Mexican regional music response to
the coronavirus crisis in the música huasteca community: the growth of interactive
huapango livestreams as a preexisting but newly significant space for informal community
gathering and cultural participation at the onset of the coronavirus pandemic, and the
composition of original verses by son huasteco performers addressing the pandemic.
Both the livestreams and the newly created coronavirus disease (COVID) verses reflect
critical improvisatory approaches to the pandemic in música huasteca. The interactive
livestreams signaled an ad hoc community infrastructure facilitated by social media and
an emerging community space fostered by Do-It-Yourself (DIY) activists. Improvised
COVID-related verses presented resonant local and regional themes as a community
response to a global crisis. Digital ethnography conducted since March 2020 revealed
a regional burst of musical creativity coupled with DIY intentionality, a leveling of access
to virtual community spaces, and enhanced digital intimacies established across a wide
cultural diaspora in Mexico and the USA. These responses were musically, poetically, and
organizationally improvisational, as was the overall outpouring of the son huasteco music
inspired by the coronavirus outbreak. Son huasteco is a folk music tradition from the
Huasteca, a geo-cultural region spanning the intersection of six states in central Mexico.
This study examines a selection of musical responses by discussing improvisational
examples in both Spanish and the indigenous language Nahuatl, and in the virtual musical
communities of the Huasteca migrant diaspora in digital events such as “Encuentro
Virtual de Tríos Huastecos,” the “Huapangos Sin Fronteras” festival and competition,
and in the nightly gatherings on social media platforms developed during the pandemic
to sustain the Huastecan cultural expression. These phenomena have served as vibrant
points of transnational connection and identity in a time where physical gatherings
were untenable.
Department
Subject
Collections
The following license files are associated with this item: