Sones de México Ensemble Chicago


Sones de México Ensemble Chicago is a Chicago, United States, folk music group that specializes in the Mexican musical tradition known as son.
Sones de México Ensemble Chicago formed in 1994 to keep the Mexican son tradition alive in its many regional forms, including the regional styles of huapango, gustos, chilenas, and son jarocho, among others. As performers and recording artists, the ensemble has developed and popularized many original arrangements of Mexican traditional tunes touring mostly in the Midwest, East Coast and Southern U.S. Some of its original work has experimented cross-culturally with symphonic, Irish, folk, country, jazz, and rock music, though never abandoning its roots in Mexican son.
Also a not-for-profit 501 organization, the ensemble is committed to teaching. The ensemble members reach out to young and old with many of their educational programs nationwide.
Sones de México's album Esta Tierra Es Tuya was nominated both for a Latin Grammy for Best Folk Album of 2007 and for a Grammy for Best Mexican/Mexican-American Album. The title song is the group's translation of the Woody Guthrie song, with some slight modifications for the Mexican immigrant context. That album also included arrangements of J.S. Bach's "Brandenburg Concerto No. 3" and of Led Zeppelin's instrumental "Four Sticks", with most of the remaining nine pieces being traditional, all played "on over 50 all-acoustic instruments from México".
In 2010 Sones de México marked the 100th anniversary of the Mexican Revolution with its ¡Viva la Revolución! album. In 2012, their album 13 B’ak’tun celebrated "the beginning of a new era according to the Mayan calendar". Starting in 2014, with the help of a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, the group created the musical/educational program A Musical Geography of Mexico. In 2016, Sones de México developed and performed their soundtrack to Sergei Eisenstein’s unfinished silent film ¡Que Viva Mexico!.
On September 8, 2015 at the Library of Congress, the just-inducted United States Poet Laureate Juan Felipe Herrera, Sones de Mexico, and their songwriting class, cowrote the ballad "Corrida de Sandra Bland", in Spanish, to honor the Chicago woman who had died in police custody in Texas. Sones de Mexico performed the song the next day.
When Esta Tierra Es Tuya was being recorded, Sones de México consisted of Victor Pichardo, Juan Díes, Zacbé Pichardo, Lorena Iñiguez, Javier Saume, and Juan Rivera. In 2014, Victor Pichardo left to return to his native Mexico. By February 2017, the group consisted of Díes, Iñiguez, Zacbé Pichardo, Gonzalo Cordova, Eric Hines, and Rudy Piñon. Later in 2017, Iñiguez left and Eréndira Izguerra joined, and in 2018 Victor Pichardo returned to the group.

Discography - Albums

All self-released by Sones de México Ensemble Chicago, on CD and download: