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Stained glass window entitled "El Jarabe Tapatio" (The Jarabe Dance from Guadalajara) designed by Roberto Montenegro and Xavier Guerrero in the 1920s at the Museo de la Luz in the historic center of Mexico City. The Mexican hat dance, also known as Jarabe Tapatío, is the national dance of Mexico. [1]
Jesús González Rubio (died April 26, 1874) was a professor of music in Guadalajara, Mexico, who is best known for having composed the Jarabe Tapatío, also known in the United States as the "Mexican Hat Dance".
Jarabe dancers Jarabe Tapatío in the traditional China Poblana dress. The Jarabe is considered Mexico's “national dance” and is the best known outside the country, often called the “Mexican Hat Dance” in English. [24] [25] The dance was performed for the first time formally in 1860 at the Coliseo Theater in Mexico City.
Jarabe Tapatío. The jarabe is one of the most traditional song forms of the mariachi genre. In the Spanish language, jarabe literally means syrup, which probably refers to the mixture of meters within one jarabe (compare salsa). Typically, a jarabe will go from a 6 8 to others sections with 3 4, 2 4, return to 6 8 and end in another meter.
Roberto Montenegro Nervo (February 19, 1885, in Guadalajara – October 13, 1968, in Mexico City) was a painter, muralist and illustrator, who was one of the first to be involved in the Mexican muralism movement after the Mexican Revolution.
In the state of Jalisco, its Jarabe Tapatio, or "hat dance", while the son and El baile de los sonajeros are famous dances which accompany the mariachi; one of the most popular songs is "El Son de la Negra" (1940). The state of Guerrero is known for its sintesis and tixtla.
Son jarocho ("Veracruz Sound") is a regional folk musical style of Mexican Son from Veracruz, a Mexican state along the Gulf of Mexico.It evolved over the last two and a half centuries along the coastal portions of southern Tamaulipas state and Veracruz state, hence the term jarocho, a colloquial term for people or things from the port city of Veracruz.
El Jarabe Tapatio created by the artist with Roberto Montenegro. Doorway in the Museum of Light in Mexico City painted by the artist. Xavier Guerrero was born in 1896 with the name Javier Guerrero Saucedo Francisco, using the variant "Xavier Guerrero" as his professional name. [1]