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Cathedral trumpets return of mariachi Mass

Special service on tap in mid-Sept. to honor virus victims

- By Giovanna Dell’orto

TUCSON, Ariz. — A blast of festive trumpet flourishes and guitarron bass breaks the solemn hush of Mass on a torrid August desert morning.

Decked out in gold-embroidere­d suits, nine musicians pick, strum and trumpet the entrance hymn under tall stained-glass windows.

After more than a year of silence due to the pandemic, mariachis are back playing Sunday services at Tucson’s St. Augustine Cathedral, where the colorful and sonorous tradition dates back a half-century and fuses Roman Catholicis­m with Mexican American pride.

For the hundreds of worshipper­s gathered in this Spanish colonial church, and other congregati­ons across the Southwest, the unique sound of mariachi liturgy is more than just another version of choir.

It evokes a borderland­s identity where spirituali­ty and folk music have blended for centuries.

“Syncretism is the reality of this land, the ‘ambos’ reality,” said the Rev. Alan Valencia, the cathedral’s rector, who grew up attending mariachi Mass in “ambos Nogales,” or “both Nogales,” as locals refer to the two cities of the same name straddling the U.S.-Mexican border about 60 miles to the south.

“And that’s what we see in these mariachi Masses,” he added. “Faith and culture come together and grow.”

Mariachi forms the soundtrack to daily life here in the borderland­s, accompanyi­ng everything from backyard barbecues and quinceaner­a coming-ofage parties to weddings and funerals.

Yet while mariachi is a

popular genre at its core, musicians and parishione­rs alike say its emotional interplay between trumpet, violin, guitar, vihuela and guitarron is a natural complement to the holy rites of Mass.

“The Mass itself is a reminder that you don’t just have mariachis you tip at tableside in a cantina,” said Alberto Ranjel, who has been playing at the cathedral since he was 9 and now leads the ensemble his father founded, Mariachi Tapatio. “It is a representa­tion of my culture.”

Worshipper Leilani Gomez echoed that sentiment.

“They bring to Mass culture and art, together with the presence of God,” Gomez said. “They make you feel the presence of God.”

The first canon of mariachi Mass was composed in Cuernavaca, Mexico, after the Vatican encouraged the incorporat­ion of regional

musical traditions into services in the 1960s. Called the Misa Panamerica­na, or Pan-American Mass, it features a specific order of instrument­al arrangemen­ts, sung prayers and hymns, according to Dan Sheehy, director and curator of the Smithsonia­n Folkways Recordings.

At that time in the United States, the Chicano civil rights movement was blossoming, and mariachi musicians morphed from folksy troubadour­s to cultural heroes, “symbols of Mexican identity heightened here because of multicultu­ralism,” Sheehy added.

Hundreds of mariachi

school programs followed in the 1970s, when the music began to be written down instead of taught by lyrical training, said George Bejarano, who in 1973 started playing with the youth group Los Changuitos Feos, or “the ugly little monkeys,” and whose family has been in the borderland­s “since before there were borders.”

Also, female musicians began joining the traditiona­lly male ensembles.

Mainstays of mariachi Mass include the joyful “Pescador de Hombres,” or “fisher of men” — the Spanish-speaking faithful’s equivalent to “Amazing Grace” for its popularity and ubiquity — and a thrilling rendition of Franz Schubert’s 19th-century classic, “Ave Maria.”

During performanc­es of the latter at the cathedral, Ranjel turns to face a painting of the Virgin of Guadalupe, patroness of Mexico and the Americas, and intones the Latin version of the lyrics.

“The prayer aspect of it is what I’m respecting by singing it in Latin,” he said.

Four ensembles take turns performing the 8 a.m. Spanish-language Mass at the cathedral in central Tucson, one Sunday apiece per month.

All volunteers, they typically spend at least two hours a week in rehearsal and on Mass day rise before dawn to prepare their trajes de charro, elaboratel­y festooned suits that originated in Mexico and are commonly worn by mariachi groups.

For musicians like Daniel Rodriguez, the leader of Mariachi Herencia de Cuco Del Cid, a 20-year fixture at the cathedral and also Most Holy Trinity Church in the city’s northwest, performing is a way to give back to the community.

“When you sing or there’s music offered up to God, it’s like praying but it’s more powerful,” Rodriguez said. “For us to be a driving force through our music, to inspire people to come back and stay at Mass, that’s really powerful.”

On Sept. 18 Los Changuitos will feature at a special Mass honoring victims of the coronaviru­s pandemic, which has killed nearly 2,500 people in Tucson’s Pima County and silenced the mariachi services from spring 2020 until they resumed late last month.

On a recent Sunday, the show kept going even after Mass was over, with musicians serenading worshipper­s on the palm-lined patio outside the cathedral. Wearing face masks against the resurgent virus, people held up smartphone­s to record the sights and sounds of a shared heritage they had sorely missed.

“They bring unity to the church. It’s more spiritual,” said Diana Pacheco, who has attended mariachi Mass since childhood. “Without them, it was very empty-feeling for us here.”

 ?? DARRYL WEBB/AP ?? Mariachi members Roman Murillo, front, and Cameron Davison play their trumpets at St. Augustine Cathedral.
DARRYL WEBB/AP Mariachi members Roman Murillo, front, and Cameron Davison play their trumpets at St. Augustine Cathedral.

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