The Tucson International Mariachi Conference has returned for its 42nd year with meetings, showcases and the all-day outdoor Fiesta de Garibaldi Saturday, May 4, at downtown’s Jacomé Plaza.

The supergroup Mariachi Sol de Mexico headlines the Espectacular Concert at 7 p.m. Friday, May 3, at Linda Ronstadt Music Hall, 260 S. Church Ave.

The conference, running through Sunday, opened May 1 with an assortment of mariachi/folklórico workshops at the Tucson Convention Center, 260 S. Church Ave., along with nightly musical competitions at the MSA Annex, 267 S. Avenida del Convento, in the Mercado District.

The glorious romance of mariachi is as much a part of the 42nd Tucson International Mariachi Conference as the music. 

Friday night’s concert will feature music from the internationally acclaimed band leader Jóse Hernández and Mariachi Sol de Mexico, the Grammy-nominated ensemble he founded that has performed with artists including Selena, the Beach Boys and Luis Miguel.

Saturday’s Fiesta de Garibaldi at Jacomé Plaza, 101 N. Stone Ave., features more live mariachi music, food and other festivities, before the conference wraps up on Sunday with a mariachi Mass at noon at St. Augustine Cathedral, 192 S. Stone Ave.

“I think a lot of people look at Tucson as the mecca of mariachi in the States and I think it has a lot to do with the Tucson International Mariachi Conference,” said John Contreras, music director of the award-winning Mariachi Aztlán de Pueblo High School.

Contreras, who is also an International Mariachi Conference board member, has been preparing his students for their mariachi workshops all year.

Although the conference is typically well known for its visiting Mariachi virtuosos, Contreras said that for his students, the conference is all about the workshops. The students participating in the mariachi and folklórico workshops will vary in skill level, ranging from beginning players and dancers to the most advanced students in the city.

Young aspiring mariachi are key to the annual Tucson International Mariachi Conference.

“The master level students are students that are really, really ready to tackle hard music and hard dance,” Contreras said. “So usually the master levels are taught by some of the greatest professional groups nationally and internationally.”

At this year’s conference, members of the Los Angeles-based Mariachi Sol de Mexico are teaching the highest level workshops, as well as performing at the conference.

“It will be like if you had a high school baseball team and then all of a sudden you have the Yankees or the Red Socks come in and give a three-day clinic to your team, you know?” said Contreras.

Pueblo High School’s Mariachi Aztlán will be learning from Sol de Mexico during the week.

Group co-leader and Pueblo High senior Jazlynne Fernandez, 17, will perform for her final time before graduating later this month.

“Every year we do the conference and we’re ninth-time winners,” she said.

In addition to winning first place in the conference nine consecutive years, Aztlán de Pueblo was also named Tucson’s best mariachi band by Tucson Weekly in 2021.

“I’m just excited to be on the stage again. This is my last year, obviously, and it’s just something that I’m looking forward to,” Fernandez said. “Performing with everyone one last time.”

Fernandez will play violin and sing at the event at 7 p.m. Thursday and if Aztlán walks away with the top prize, they will join Mariachi Sol de Mexico Friday night in the Espactacular Concert at the Music Hall. The concert begins at 7 p.m. and tickets start at $40 at tucsonmariachi.org.

At 10 a.m. Saturday, the 12-hour Fiesta de Garibaldi returns to Jacomé Plaza for the first time since 2019, said International Mariachi Conference board member Adrian Perez.

“It’s gonna be a day-long event filled with music and dance and food,” said Perez. “We’re all excited about that. It’ll be a bigger footprint than what we’ve typically had.”

Perez said that the International Mariachi Conference board is kicking around the idea of shifting back to more community-accessible events like this one.

“One of our goals up front and in general is to make our particular festival and this event one of the most accessible events to anybody in the community. You don’t have to be a part of the workshops or any of the concerts to go take part in it,” he said.

Perez said the Garibaldi, with tickets for $25, will function as an all-encompassing episode of the conference, featuring some student workshops, a nighttime concert and loads of additional activities throughout the day.

“It’s about catering to the community’s desire to be out there and supporting the students and just having a good time,” he said.

Perez said that the conference is reaching out to other local event organizers including the Dusk Festival and the Tucson Folk Festival for ideas on how to map out more community-inclusive mariachi events for future conferences.

“We’ve been trying to make relationships with other successful organizations that have done great jobs with their festivals and their community events and the key is like, ‘Why reinvent the wheel if you already have people in the community doing a great job’,” said Perez.

Perez emphasized that one of the benefits of the Garibaldi is its high level of inclusivity and the fact that people from Tucson, without any additional knowledge of the conference, could participate and enjoy the festivities.

For the complete schedule and more information, visit tucsonmariachi.org.

Tucson native, Emmy and Grammy winner Linda Ronstadt honored at a ceremony before the International Mariachi Conference's Espectacular Concert with the renaming of the Tucson Music Hall as The Linda Ronstadt Music Hall. Video by Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily Star


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