Friday, February 26, 2010

Conjunto 101 reviewed

for more, check out conjuntoislife.com


''Conjunto 101'' goes far beyond the rudimentary
By
Hector Saldana
on Feb 25, 10 01:03 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

At a fundraiser at Instituto Cultural de Mexico on Wednesday aimed at encouraging young Hispanics to consider the health profession as a career, a presentation called "Conjunto 101" was in no way as rudimentary as it sounded.

Author Joe Nick Patoski and photographer John Dyer entertained and educated a crowd of about 60 people with stories about their long involvement in the conjunto music scene.

Both men have documented, in their own ways, the pioneers of the Tex-Mexican folk music idiom. They aren't trespassing on the sacred bones of Narciso Martinez or Santiago Jimenez Sr.

"What are two gringos doing up here?" Patoski said in his opening remarks. The truth is he is among a handful of journalists giving the subject any respect.

His credentials -- 17 years at Texas Monthly, best-selling books about Selena ("Selena: Como la Flor"), Stevie Ray Vaughan (Stevie Ray Vaughan: Caught in the Crossfire") and Willie Nelson ("Willie Nelson: An Epic Life") and managing the True Believers - are unmatched.

Likewise, Dyer's photo books "El Vaquero Real: The Original American Cowboy" and "Conjunto" capture the true essence of the region.

Patoski has always hailed San Antonio as one of the great American cities. Tonight was no different. "San Antonio is one of the few places in the U.S. with a sense of place," Patoski said.

Dyer immediately began documenting conjunto when he moved to San Antonio in 1990. "It hit me that something had to be done," Dyer said.

About conjunto: "The sad thing is that most people that live outside of here have never even heard the word," Dyer added.

At the heart of conjunto is the accordion. Mexican musicians were drawn to the European instrument and the polkas played on it. They soon invented "musica alegre."

"It's the instrument that travels best," Patoski said. "Accordion, to me, is the national instrument of Texas. Conjunto is Texas specific.'"

Patoski shared many stories (he hung out with Esteban "Steve" Jordan" in Corpus Christi in 1977). Likewise, Dyer delighted the audience with a tale about Mingo Saldivar and how the musician, a former paratrooper, wanted to parachute into the conjunto festival at Rosedale Park.

Equally enlightening was the authentic and heartwarming music program at the top and end of the session.

Bajo sexto player Rudolfo Lopez played songs with Conjunto Heritage Taller student Rito Pena, a clean-cut, 11-year-old who plays a Hohner Panther accordion.

"It's a labor of love," Lopez said about keeping traditions alive. "Conjunto music is not concert music, if you hear it, you want to dance." Sure enough, a couple danced.

Those interested in making a contribution to the scholarship fun of the nonprofit Mexican American Hispanic Physicians Association (MAHPA) may call (210) 340-8824 or contact online at www.mapa-sa.org.

Friday, February 19, 2010

A Walk Through El West Side of San Antonio


















On Wednesday night, February 24, photographer John Dyer, Rudy Lopez and Bene Medina and students of the Conjunto Heritage Taller will present Conjunto 101 at the Instituto Cultural de Mexico in downtown San Antonio.

John's book Conjunto (University of Texas Press) is the definitive photo book of conjunto and Rudy and Bene are carrying on the tradition by teaching the music to kids in San Antonio.

Click on the headline to watch John's film tour of El West Side de San Anto.

Joe Nick on the Rio Grande for Texas Highways

Click on the headline for a short vid



















photo by J. Griffis Smith




















Floating the Canyons: A Rio Grande Restorative


By Joe Nick Patoski

Maybe it’s the exhilarating sense of isolation, or the feeling that you’ve fallen off the edge of the earth into another world. But floating the big canyons of the Big Bend by raft, canoe, or kayak is an experience like none other in Texas or the world beyond. Some folks take to the Rockies or New York or somewhere overseas for vacation. I prefer the exotic charms of a trip on the Rio Grande in the Big Bend any day.

Extreme southwest Texas looks like nowhere else: a pure desert and mountains landscape with uninterrupted vistas and a sprawling sky overhead. Each deep gorge —Santa Elena, Mariscal, and Boquillas canyons inside Big Bend National Park, Colorado Canyon upstream, and the Lower Canyons below the park—exudes the kind of majesty the Texas myth was built upon. Only in this case, these are the real deal, towering like skyscrapers as much as 1,500 feet above the river, rendering insignificant those few humans floating through. It’s a setting as surreal as any dreamscape. No matter what kind of expedition you embark on, just remember: Once you’re on the Rio Grande, there’s no turning back, because you’ve left the rest of the world behind.

People like you and me have had the chance to enjoy the extreme beauty of this most unusual place ever since the company then known as Far Flung Adventures started organizing Big Bend river excursions in the early 1970s. Since then, whenever the Rio Grande is flowing (which isn’t always a given), river outfitters have been guiding visitors into the canyons for short day trips and overnighters, as well as longer expeditions that can last for days and weeks.

Some trips are rudimentary, straight-up river runs with no more than a boat, paddles, life vests, and a guide. Other trips are full-immersion experiences where you can enjoy gourmet meals, lectures, seminars on photography, geology, astronomy, and writing, or with singer-songwriters or classical chamber groups providing the entertainment. On some deluxe trips, you don’t have to pick up a paddle or pack up a tent unless you want to.

No matter what kind of expedition you embark on, just remember: Once you’re on the Rio Grande, there’s no turning back, because you’ve left the rest of the world behind.

Cell phone service and roadside assistance are nonexistent. The nearest hospital is 100 miles north, and it’s more than a day’s hike to a convenience store. In exchange for such remoteness, you’re rewarded with constantly changing scenery that few others have been privileged to see as your boat floats between sheer walls rising above the water. Around every bend, the senses intensify. Revelations are served up on an abstract palette with otherworldly visuals emerging from water, rock, and sky. On a clear night, the starlight can be so bright you can see in the dark. Smells become sharper in the Big Bend’s canyons, especially around whitewater rapids, when rushing water churns into froth. When it rains, wet creosote in the surrounding Chihuahuan Desert emits an aromatic scent that seduces the nostrils like perfume. Absolute silence is broken only by voices, the sounds of water flowing and wind blowing, the steady stroke of a paddle, the distinctive descending trill of canyon wrens and the occasional screech of a hawk, your breathing, and your heartbeat.

When you your voice echoes three or four times, bouncing off distant rock walls. The daily ritual emphasizes relaxing recreation and fun: Pancakes, eggs, and hot coffee or hot chocolate for breakfast, breaking camp, paddling, the careful scouting of rapids and the adrenaline rush of running them, stopping for sandwiches and drinks for lunch, some more paddling and trail exploring in the afternoon, making camp, enjoying Dutch-oven delicacies for dinner accompanied by stories told by river guides (who are a breed unto themselves), casual conversations between river trippers, and personal revelations. Every moment is a Kodak moment,even when the winds kick up and the dust blows.

I’ve had the pleasure of doing all five canyons in and around Big Bend National Park, from half-day power paddles to more leisurely week-long passages with time to hike into side canyons and soak in hot springs. Every trip remains vivid in my mind. Camp on the left side of the river going downstream and you’re in Texas. Camp on the right side of the river and you’re in Mexico. Note the absence of humanity, including no air traffic overhead.

Granted, some Big Bend river trip memories include not-so-pleasant moments, because river trips are unpredictable. Like the time we almost made it into Santa Elena Canyon before the heavens rained thunder and lightning upon us, forcing us to move our tents to higher ground twice in the dark (the upside was peeking out of the tent to see waterfalls gushing out of every pouroff along the rim whenever the sky lit up).

The next day, my son and I tumped our inflatable kayak as we entered the canyon,
forcing us to swim to safety. It was almost an hour before our party of nine fetched the boat downstream. When we reached Rockslide, the one dangerous rapid in the canyon, our group lost another boat and we spent another two hours retrieving it. Both efforts required the kind of teamwork and coordination that brought out the best in our group. The skies cleared and we camped on a grassy vega by the river, watched Mexican free-tailed bats flitter about in the gathering dusk, enjoyed a warm meal by campfire, and went to sleep watching satellites and meteors. My son and I still talk about that trip, and smile as we recount even the more perilous parts of our adventure.

Someday, I hope to budget a month or so and do the whole 250-river-mile run from Colorado Canyon upstream of Lajitas to the Lower Canyon takeout near Dryden, as one man in a canoe told me he was doing when we met in Lajitas a few years back. Whether or not I take that on is almost beside the point. All I know is I’m way overdue for a Big Bend river trip. I get that feeling whenever the last trip ends. River running on the Rio Grande is a restorative I didn’t know I needed until the first time I did it. Now I can’t live without it.