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MFDC performs in "Premios lo Nuestro 2007". Click HERE to go to intro screen for video.
The Huasteca Region
Near the Gulf of Mexico, comprising parts of six states lies a region of sub-tropical climate known as "La Huasteca"
(Nahuatl: Inhabitant from the region of abundant gourds). Southern Tamaulipas, northern Veracruz, northeastern San
Luis Potosí, northern Hidalgo, Querétaro and Puebla are parts of this region, abundant in resources and the home of
several indigenous groups, with a hybrid language and culture, containing a vast array of ritual dancing, costuming,
and music.The Son Huasteco
Typical music and dance here are known as Huapango (Nahuatl: Dance on a resonant platform), which is a distant
relative of seguidillas and fandangos, the two saddest flamenco styles. Flamenco is Southern Spanish folk music and
dance, that is sad, languorous sorrowful and dramatic, reflecting the ambiance of its arid region. Dancing is saturated
with complicated foot stomping. Because of la Huasteca's abundant resources, the deep sorrowful singing is replaced
with a music style that is a joyous celebration of life. The falsetto, vocal passages of sustained high tones,
resembles the deep soul of the flamenco, however, the metric of huapangos is that of a son 3X4 or 6X8, light, rhythmic
and of course given to musical and singing improvisation.Costuming
Except for modern Tamaulipas, all Huastecan female dancers wear the or quetchquémitl (Pronounced keskemet and called
dhayem in Tenek, the modern language of huastecos) that means in Nahuatl, covering the top and the cueitl Nahuatl for
wrap-around. These two garments along with the petob, also nahuatl for headpiece, are pre-columbian garments that have
fortunately survived to the present. In states where the indigenous element is stronger the cueitl is embroidered to
match the quetchquemitl. The most widely used costume for huapangos today is the a recent creation of maestro Baldoseras
from Monterrey; it consists of a quetchquemitl, embroidered with a styling of the poppy flower; a three-quarter length
skirt and an apron decorated like the top. The men wear a guayabera and carry a palm hat in the right hand. True
huapango dancing was probably never done the way it is theatrically represented today but it is surely a favorite among
seasoned dancers and musicians. |
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