Jimmy Franco Sr.,
moderator and writer of the blog site: A Latino Point of View in Today's World just posted a
comprehensive article about recent school shootings in the U.S. But he goes
beyond that:The world's longest-established Chicana Chicano, Latina Latino literary blog.
Saturday, January 12, 2013
Death, guns. KUVO radio. Spanish at SciFi Con.
Jimmy Franco Sr.,
moderator and writer of the blog site: A Latino Point of View in Today's World just posted a
comprehensive article about recent school shootings in the U.S. But he goes
beyond that:Saturday, September 01, 2012
Rodriguez Searching for Sugarman. De La Ventana art
His
parents settled in Detroit, Michigan, only to secure permanent work in the
foundries and auto factories in the post World War II victory boom. Sixto had
to learn English and assimilate as a child in order to belong to the Detroit
Public School system, but more importantly, not to be viewed as an alien
presence in Motown. Sixto
is a genius. During the 1960’s and ‘70’s his talents were invisible, ignored
and devalued.![]() |
| Malinche by De La Ventana |
Hispanic Art Exhibit, Pueblo, Colo.
"Currently he is an on-air radio host in Denver at public radio station KUVO, 89.3. He uses yet another pseudonym, Pocho Joe, during his radio program called La Raza Rocks heard Sundays from 1:00p.m. - 2:00p.m. He believes, as in his art, the radio show’s focus should be about the musical artists, their stories and messages in the music rather than the DJ. You can stream KUVO on-line here."Saturday, September 04, 2010
Madonnas, Ernest Hogan, Flo Hernandez-Ramos
Skyhorse's Madonnas: CACAFrom amigo Rigoberto Gonzalez comes word of his El Paso Times Book Review of Brandon Skyhorse's The Madonnas of Echo Park.Does Rigo sound negative about the novel? Sounds more like the book deserves my CACA award for double cultural appropriation. The article's entitled Ouch: Stereotypes, clunkers fill stories in 'Madonnas' (special to the El Paso Times).
Here's a sample from the review:
"One character says, 'My sisters had left America and moved South, to a small Mexican village in Guadalajara.' (Don't see the problem? Guadalajara is a city.)"
Simón, like I live in the small American village of Sunnyside in Denver.
Check out Rigo's biting analysis here.
Chicano SF in FLURB
Ernest Hogan of Charla-Interview fame, and Chicano author of Cortez on Jupiter has a new story up on Rudy Rucker's FLURB, A Webzine of Astonishing Tales. It's entitled Doctora Xilbalba's Datura Enema, a story about what can happen to The Man if he gets too deep into a futuristic Narcolandia. Who said Chicanos don't make good SciFi characters? Hogan also gave La Bloga a nice plug at the end.
8.29.10 Denver celebration 'taba suave
Superlatives about Flo . . . flowed, all day, on the morning radio show and into the night. As we all know, most ChicanAs can do the work of any two ChicanOs. Flo's one of those who does the work of three. In some ways, her reputation enters the world of myth and magic, so for the occasion I created a one-hundred-and-eleven-word microstory. Aquí está:
111 4 8.29.10
The trickster god Tezcatlipoca challenged the shaman Chaneco to a duel.
"Show me someone swift, brilliant as a shooting star. If I win, I take a human heart."
So Chaneco revealed an unassuming Chicana completing her daily chores.
Enojado, the trickster god said, "Show me someone ferocious like El Huracán."
Chaneco again showed her, blazing to meet her deadlines.
Tezcatlipoca roared, "Show me something as neverending as me!"
Thereupon Chaneco held up her heart, resounding with love for her gente's cultura.
"What is this supernatural demon?"
Materializing herself, she declared, "I. Am. Flo."
Humiliated by this colibrí cafecita, Tezcatlipoca fled the Earth.
And left her heart where it belongs.
With Manuel.
es todo, hoy,
RudyG
Friday, August 27, 2010
Fotos - 25 Years at KUVO - Chile Harvest
¿mas k?
sweet condemnation
musica de carlos[original artwork by Carlos Fresquez]
This weekend marks the 25th anniversary of public radio station KUVO, 89.3 FM. I still remember the first day of broadcasting; no one, and I mean no one, gave the station a chance. The odds were stacked against the new outlet. The station was going to be run by a bunch of amateurs who did not have a track record in media. And, although the press releases spoke about "bilingual public radio", they were going to broadcast jazz, latin jazz and blues, not banda. At the head of the station was a diminutive, high energy Chicana who brought humor, hard-work, and dedication, but no money, experience, or political baggage.Today, the award-winning station is one of the premier jazz venues in the world (www.kuvo.org), internationally known for its diverse and exciting programming. World-class musicians regularly perform in the high-tech performance studio, and over the decades the station has hosted all the greats, as well as local bands and numerous college and high school units. The weekend programs are nationally envied for consistent high ratings and creative, innovative formats: Native American, Latin American protest and folk, blues, R&B, Chicano rock, African American roots music, salsa and Latin fusion, Brazilian pop, and much, much more. KUVO truly is the "oasis in the city."
Flo Hernandez-Ramos helped create the station. She worked with other founders for more than two years-- fund raising, dealing with the FCC, taking care of debt owed by the previous license holder, lining up the original staff and board, and learning from scratch about what public radio is all about. Then, for more than twenty years Flo was the CEO and driving force behind the station. She was there at the beginning and she has been through it all: no money, not enough staff, intermittent electricity, makeshift equipment, federal myopia, local apathy. She endeavored and endured and she gathered around her a stellar staff of radio pros just as dedicated as she. Flo is a national symbol for Latino-controlled public service radio, winning countless awards and gaining recognition as a tireless force for community involvement, diversity in staff and programming, and setting high standards for all other Latino media. She left her administrative responsibilities a couple of years ago but she stayed on as a volunteer, continuing as the mainstay for the immensely popular Sunday show Canción Mexicana. This program is the flagship for the weekend - one of the most listened-to shows in any radio service area, and clearly a leading example of how one culture's "cantina music" can cross over to any audience if just given the chance.
Well, this incredible run is finally over this weekend. Flo's last show as DJ for Canción Mexicana will happen August 29th (the actual date KUVO went live.) Flo will stay involved with public radio as the Director of the Latino Public Radio Consortium, but her regular gig as DJ is done. In typical Flo and KUVO style, that means a big party. If you haven't obtained your tickets for the in-studio celebration, then listen beginning at 10:00 AM, on the radio or the Internet. There will be plenty of live music, memories and testimonials, and Flo gets a chance to say one more goodbye, one more adiós to her many fans and friends.
Meanwhile, check out the Chile Harvest Festival, August 28 and 29 at the Lakewood Heritage Center, sponsored by the Chicano Humanities and Arts Council (CHAC), 10 AM - 5 PM. I'll see you there on Saturday at 1:00 PM when I'll be signing King of the Chicanos at the Cultural Legacy booth.
Later.
Friday, August 20, 2010
Bits and Pieces
alurista is one of the seminal and most influential voices in the history of Chicano Literature. A pioneering poet of the Chicano Movement in the late 60s and 70s, he broke down barriers in the publishing world with his use of bilingual and multilingual writings in Spanish, English, Nahuatl and Maya. A scholar, activist, editor, organizer and philosopher, he holds a Ph.D in Spanish and Latin American Literature from the University of California in San Diego and is the author of ten books including Floricanto en Aztlán (1971), Timespace Huracán (1976), Spik in Glyph? (1981) and Z Eros (1995). His book, Et Tú Raza?, won the Before Columbus Foundation National Book Award in Poetry in 1996. Author of El Plan Espiritual de Aztlán, he is a key figure in the reclaiming of the MeXicano cultural identity, history and heritage through his integration of American Indian language, symbols and spirituality in his writings.
Tunaluna is classic alurista: passionate, sensuous, and political. alurista’s tenth book of poetry is a collection of 52 poems that takes us on a time trip through the first decade of the 21st century where he bears witness to the “Dubya” wars, terrorism, oil and $4 gallons of gas, slavery, and ultimately spiritual transformation and salvation. The “Word Wizard of Aztlan” is at his razor-sharp best, playing with his palabras as well as with our senses and sensibilities. alurista is a Xicano poet for the ages and a chronicler of la Nueva Raza Cózmica. With Tunaluna he trumpets the return of Quetzalcoatl, the feathered-serpent of Aztec and Mayan prophecy, and helps to lead us out of war and into the dawn of a new consciousness and sun, el Sexto Sol, nahuicoatl, cuatro serpiente, the sun of justice.
“alurista experiments on the edge, thickly layers multiple meanings onto each cryptic line through language play, brilliant code-switching (‘tu mellow dia’) and love songs to la raza. A statement of survival, he confronts the politics and the hypocrisy of ‘the estados undidos de angloamérica’ with an irrepressible rhythm, with the ‘slingshots in our hands’ of pre-Columbian truths, and with the ability to craft real words from our unreal world of avarice and oppression. alurista’s tenth book holds many spirit treasures calling out to us from between the lines. Con razón k he hears the haunting spirits beneath the surface—‘ayer pasé x tu casa/y me ladra/ron/los libros.’” (Carmen Tafolla, Ph.D., Doctor of Philosophy, poet and Visiting Faculty, University of Texas at San Antonio)
“Tunaluna is a work of hope, humor, outrage, and beauty by one of our most notable Chicano bards. alurista reminds his readers of the political possibilities of the poetic; in his poems, we hear the song of a people.” (Cristina Beltrán, Associate Professor of Political Science at Haverford College and author of The Trouble with Unity: Latino Politics and the Creation of Identity)
ISBN-13: 978-0-9844415-0-1 * $15.00 * 76 pages * Trade Paperback * Publication: October 2010 For more information, or to purchase Tunaluna, click on www.aztlanlibrepress.com, or contact the Publishers/Editors, Juan Tejeda or Anisa Onofre at the telephone number or e-mail address below.
302 Stratford Ct. | San Antonio, TX 78223 | 210.531.9505 | aztlanlibrepress.com | editors@aztlanlibrepress.com
[announcement from the CHAC website]
Late summer brings freshly harvested chiles to Colorado, and with them, the aromas of chile roasting and authentic Chicano cuisine. This year, the Colorado tradition continues at Lakewood’s Heritage Center. The Chile Harvest Festival celebrates contemporary Chicano art, traditional Spanish Colonial art, music, food and of course chiles, with beautiful views of the Rocky Mountain foothills as a backdrop.
Thanks to a partnership between the City of Lakewood and the Chicano Humanities & Arts Council (CHAC), the Chile Harvest Festival will be in full swing Aug 28 & 29.
The Chile Harvest Festival is an outreach effort to educate, enlighten and entertain the community with the many different facets of Chicano and Latino culture. Its goal is to give people a well-rounded cultural experience.
The festival will feature up to 75 artists, showcasing both contemporary and traditional art forms. There will also be music, dancing and storytelling as well as many other cultural and art activities for kids.
Several local restaurants will be on site, serving authentic Mexican cuisine along with other specialty foods featuring chiles. And of course, there will be nonstop chile roasting, so stock up your freezer with chiles for the winter. Demonstrators will be showcasing the art of making traditional chile ristras: dried chiles, strung together to be used in cooking throughout the year or just for decoration.
By the way - I'll be signing copies of King of the Chicanos at the Cultural Legacy booth on August 28 at 1:00 PM. Come on by, we can talk about chile.
Click on the image for details of KUVO's 25th anniversary party that also celebrates 25 years of Cancíon Mexicana and the final show for the long-time host, Flo.
HILARY DePOLO
Poetry and Performance
Join me for two performances this month (Denver):
(Third) Thursday August 19th ¤ Forza Coffee ¤
104th and Federal ¤ 7 pm
followed by an open mic
Saturday August 21st ¤ Ice Cube Gallery ¤ 3320 Walnut ¤
7 pm ¤ with Jeff Wittig on guitar
followed by an open mic on the theme of LIGHT
www.artconsultation.com
Hilary DePolo is a friend and a poet whose work I have admired for a long time. She's often done readings and created poems in conjunction with visual artists like Carlos Fresquez and Tony Ortega (whose painting Western Union Baker served as the inspiration for one of Hilary's poems.) I checked out her reading last night at the coffee shop where the emotions ran the gamut from sad reflections on a dying mother to whimsical odes to the seasons to a touching tribute to the Mexican immigrant baker and his lonely life in los estados unidos. You should try to make it to the event tomorrow night at the Ice Cube Gallery.
September 3-6, 2010
We're holding our third Albuquerque Cultural Conference, titled Crisis, Community, and Performance: Building a Resilient Society. This event is full of performances, panels, report backs, and evening discussion. It reflects the state of heightened political, economic, social, and environmental crisis in the United States in the year 2010.
The Albuquerque Cultural Conference was first convened on Labor Day weekend 2007. Below is a portion of the original conference call.
We call upon organizers, writers and artists, and progressive journalists, teachers, and dreamers from all cultures to join us in building a new society while addressing the failures of the old. We will take up the vital issues of creating a just world through hard work, alternative forms of education, and new images of cultural transformation. Political, social, class, “race,” and gender issues will be addressed. Attention will be paid to critical topics including nuclear establishment, the people and the land, border crossings, cultural memory, and festivals of the oppressed.
Keep on readin'.
Later.
Friday, March 19, 2010
Guest Tribute to Bobby Espinosa - Book Events and News
In the 1960’s a group of San Gabriel High School students led by bassist Freddy Sanchez formed a Chicano band called the VIP’s. The VIP’s included guitarist Micky Lespron. Their Mexican-American rhythm and blues style of music was missing a key component. Freddy met a keyboardist from a Chicano surf band (Micky & the Invaders) and invited him to join the VIP’s. His name was Bobby Espinosa. This began a life-long professional and personal friendship and brotherhood.
With an expanded line-up, the VIP’s were invited to Eddie Davis’ recording studio in Hollywood to record a rendition of Gerald Wilson’s song Viva Tirado. Gerald had written this jazz piece to honor the great Mexican bullfighter, Jose Ramon Tirado, who refused to kill the bull he was fighting. The recording session was magic and Eddie saw so much talent in this group of young Chicanos.
Eddie Davis recognized how racist our American society was towards Mexican-Americans. He knew that previous Latin groups had to hide their cultural identity just to get airplay in regional markets. He convinced the VIP’s to change their name to El Chicano in a daring move in order to confront the music industry and help American listeners come to grips with America’s second largest minority at that time.
El Chicano was born in a burst of cultural pride in 1970. Keep in mind that until the Chicano civil rights movement in the 1960’s and ‘70’s, the term Chicano had a negative connotation. Mexicanos used Chicano as a put down for Mexican Americans and Anglo society viewed Chicano as a radical and anti-American term. This group of six musicians helped us to understand ‘somos Chicanos’.
KAPP Records released the album Viva Tirado by El Chicano. The group’s original line-up included: Ersi Arvisu on tambourine and maracas and vocals on later productions; Andre Baeza on congas; John DeLuna on drums; Little Micky Lespron on guitar; Freddy Sanchez on electric bass; and Bobby Espinosa on the organ.
The year 1970 shared the birth of the band El Chicano as well as the Chicano Moratorium, an action to voice opposition to American aggression and in particular in opposition to the occupation of Vietnam. 1970 was also a year when the United Farmworker Movement educated America about the illegal slave wage practices and pesticide usage throughout our farmlands. 1970 marked the infancy of Chicano student and community organizations throughout the Southwest. Why do I mention these historical facts? If music is culture, and culture is a reflection of society, then the music of El Chicano was both a reflection and a reminder of what America was in 1970. As El Chicano toured the United States in the early 1970’s, they knew they had chosen the perfect band name.
Because of Viva Tirado’s national distribution and billboard success, El Chicano was invited to the prestigious Ohio Jazz Festival held at the old Crosley Field in Cincinnati in 1970. The promoters were shocked when a Chicano rock band showed up. Two minutes into their first song, they won over both the promoters and the crowd to their style of Chicano fusion. That scene was repeated that summer when they played the Apollo Theatre in Harlem. New Yorkers weren’t sure what the word Chicano meant but assumed they were a black group. Bobby recalled that audience members shouted “who are these Indians?”
By year’s end, El Chicano was named Jazz Group of the Year by music industry’s trade magazines Billboard and Record World. Bobby Espinosa tells us in the liner notes of the CD titled Chicano Chant that I was in my early teens when I first heard someone say, music is the universal language. A decade later, I found music to be a universal bond. Bobby was mature beyond his years. The music industry promotes musicians for many of the wrong reasons. Likewise, many musicians get into the industry for unprincipled reasons. Bobby held to a sound philosophical premise, which is the love of humanity and the love of La Raza through his love of music. As a child, he was raised in a home filled with many styles of music, from mariachi to jazz. Bobby believed that his “feel” for the material enabled both he and his band to take an audience through different musical dimensions and that all people could express themselves through that music.
In 1995, Bobby’s re-tooled El Chicano band played in Japan as a part of a Latin All-Stars Tour. He remembered the Japanese youth having a fervent passion for Chicano culture including low-riding and baggy clothes. At the end of a set, at the Blue Note in Tokyo, the Japanese youth sought Bobby’s autograph, but requested he sign his name graffiti-style. While in the United States, El Chicano had a wide range of acceptance and fan’s expectations. During some tours, fans wanted Bobby to play Mexican and Tex-Mex music. Some crowds wanted to hear cumbias and rancheras. Bobby had to explain that they were Americans of Mexican descent and that El Chicano’s music in the main, reflected the urban Chicano experience. The band El Chicano knew what it was to be ….a Chicano.
Although El Chicano could aptly cover songs from Gerald Wilson and Horace Silver, from Van Morrison to Tito Puente, their renditions were puro Chicano. Bobby Espinosa was also a talented composer. Bobby and company performed for four decades and produced a number of albums including: Viva Tirado (1970); Revolucion (1971); Celebracion (1972); El Chicano (1973); Cinco (1974); Best of Everything (1975); Pyramid (of Love and Friends) (1976); This is…El Chicano (1977); Viva El Chicano (1989); and Painting the Moment (1998). In my humble opinion, Painting the Moment is Bobby’s crowning jewel. It showcases his passion and love of this music. This I consider to be his masterpiece. If Micky Lespron’s Wes Montgomery-esque guitar playing was the heart of the original El Chicano Band, Bobby Espinosa’s Hammond B-3 organ was their soul.
Bobby Espinosa is not a well-recognized name in the American music lexicon. He devoted his life to the joy of music, but in the main he was forgotten, ignored or just plain dis-invited to the table of American music. I’ve given a few facts and anecdotes of Bobby’s musical career, but one hour can not do justice to explain who he was.
Bobby died February 27, 2010 at the age of 60. Richard “Thee Mr.” Duran, a long time friend of Bobby’s recalls in Latino L.A., published on March 1st, that Bobby was just a guy with a pet turtle, who had partied with Janice Joplin and Jimi Hendrix and had Poncho Sanchez join the band while performing a fundraising event. But more importantly, there was no stage too small for Bobby. He was just plain good gente. I saw Bobby perform in 2009 at the Palladium in Denver when he joined a super-group of musicians. Once again, Bobby’s keyboard was ‘la alma’ of the night. Let’s not forget this man who never forgot us!
Books
Blackout in Precinct Puerto RicoSteven Torres
Minotaur, March 30, 2010
The publisher gives us this much about Steven Torres' latest novel: It’s Friday night when sixteen-year old Luisa Ferré stumbles into Sheriff Luis Gonzales’ path—naked, battered, and so traum
atized she won’t say a word. Between partygoers and out of towners, it isn’t long before the list of suspects begins to grow. This is the fifth in this series.
Pretty skimpy, no? There's a lot more to this book, take it from me, and I haven't even read it yet. Steven's Luis Gonzalo (not Gonzales - the publisher got the main character's name wrong - man, where is Maxwell Perkins when you need him?) series is one of the best ongoing fiction series out there, in any genre. I expect a good yarn, great action, and very human ups-and-downs for the Sheriff. At least one other reviewer (who has read the book) agrees. Check out Bill Crider's review of Blackout in Precinct Puerto Rico at this link. One unusual bit - Steven says that he wrote this book first, but here it is being published as number 5 in the series.
Mario Acevedo
Eos, March, 2010
Meanwhile, Mario Acevedo continues to make huge waves with his Felix Gomez series, now at book number five. His latest is revving up for an even more impressive run. Example: Plenty of cliffhangers keep the story moving in this horror fan's perfect vacation read - Publishers Weekly. Or, Acevedo delivers a howling good time - Scott Nicholson writing for the International Thriller Writers. Latest news is that the Felix Gomez series is under development for a graphic novel - can't wait for that. Mario will be at the Tattered Cover, Colfax, Denver, on March 22 at 7:30 pm. As the man said, you can expect a howling good time at one of Mario's events. And go to Mario's website for a special offer involving other Urban Fantasy authors - here's the link.
I'll add a short note about my own book -- I'm scheduled for the Tattered Cover, Colfax, Denver, for May 20 at 7:30 pm. I plan to read and discuss my latest, King of the Chicanos. You can find out more about the King at the Wings Press website, here. Here's some of what the publisher says about the book:
Both heroic and tragic, King of the Chicanos, captures the spirit, energy, and imagination of the 1960s' Chicano movement -- a massive and intense struggle across a broad spectrum of political and cultural issues -- through the passionate story of the "King of the Chicanos," Ramón Hidalgo. From his very humble beginnings through the tumultuous decades of being a migrant farm worker, door-to-door salesman,prison inmate, political hack, and radical activist, the novel relates Hidalgo's personal failures and self-destructive personality amid the political turmoil of the times. With a gradual acceptance of his destiny as a leader and hero of the people, this impassioned novel relates the maturation of one man while encapsulating the fever of the Chicano movement.
Read even if your eyes bleed.
Later.



