This Aztec gourd rattle filled with seeds was used in rain deity ceremonies.
Ayacachtli
Robert Stevenson identified this as his first research method: physical objects dug up at Mesoamerican sites.
Archaeological evidence
The language of the Aztec people, still spoken today, in which ritual songs and many instrument names are rooted.
Nahuatl
This term describes the sacred music composed for Catholic worship in colonial Latin American cathedrals.
Ecclesiastic music
This broad Mexican folk genre is characterized by syncopated rhythms, string interplay, and sesquialtera
Son
This turtle-shell percussion instrument was struck with a deer antler
Ayotl
Iconographic evidence.
This Yaqui ceremonial dance from Sonora re-enacts a deer hunt to the accompaniment of water drums and rasps.
Yaqui deer dance
This chapel master of the Mexico City Cathedral composed vallancicos in Nahuatl - the first polyphonic settings of indigenous-language sacred texts.
Hernando Franco
This rhythmic device alternates between 3/4 and 6/8 meter, creating a hemiola effect central to Mexican son
Sesquialtera
This large upright hand drum was the most prestigious Aztec instrument, often carved with iconographic scenes.
huehuetl
Stevenson's third method drew on written observations by Spanish soldiers and missionaries.
Chroniclers' accounts
This Mexican musician reconstructs and performs pre-Columbian music on replica indigenous instruments.
Antonio Zepeda
Juan Gutiérrez de Padilla
The son jarocho foot-stomping dance performed on a raised wooden platform
Zapateado (on a tarima)
This horizontal slit drum produces two pitches and was often paired with the huehuetl.
teponaztli
This Spanish conquistador's first-hand chronicle is a key primary source for pre-contact Aztec music.
Bernal Diaz
Stevenson concluded that Aztec music was primarily tied to this - not entertainment - serving state and temple functions.
Ritual/ceremony
The colonial racial classification system used in New Spain to categroize people by degree of mixed heritage
Castas
Arpa jarocha, jarana, requinto jarocho, or leona
Carlos Chávez composed this orchestral work for indigenous instruments only, named after the Aztec god of music.
Xochipilli-Macuilxochitl
This Maya site in Chiapas has murals (c. 790 CE) showing the most vivid pictorial evidence of ancient Mesoamerican music performance
Bonampak
Based on 16th-century sources, Stevenson concluded that indigenous music professionals were trained in this type of school.
Calmecac
This 18th century Spanish guitarist's tablature manuscripts contain rare documented examples of Afro-Latin dances including the cumbé
Santiago de Murcia
This Mexican state's regional son style - including La Negra and El Son de la Loma - formed the musical foundation of mariachi
Jalisco/son jalisciense