Todd Clouser presents a moving suite of songs, caroming between lo-fi folk, Americana-colored jazz, and spoken word, in honor of the students gone missing Sept 26, 2014 in the Mexican state of Guerrero.
Boy 44 finds the prolific and unpredictable Clouser at his most intimate, as social justice advocate, wide eyed musician, and poet. Accompanying Clouser on piano is John Medeski, the duo joined by Mexican upright bassist Aaron Cruz and drummer Gustavo Nandayapa.
Clouser explains Boy 44 -
In April 2015 I was asked to play at a progressive music festival in Mexico City, and the organizers wanted it to be me and John Medeski in Duo. We had complete freedom to choose what we wanted to perform. At that time in Mexico City, where I have lived for 4 years now, and still to this day, there were daily protests over a tragedy in the Mexican state of Guerrero. On Sept 26, 2014, 43 students were disappeared, now assumed murdered, by police near the town of Ayotzinapa, where they studied at a rural school.
I wrote the music of Boy 44 inspired by the bit I knew about Jhosivanni’s life and my experience as an immigrant living in Mexico. Medeski and I performed the music in duo in April 2015 and leaving John said, “we should just go in and record that the next day you are up in New York.” It took some time to get together, but a few months after the festival, we sat down to record some at Jamie Saft’s studio, and the rest I did back at home in Mexico City.
This Mexico
The Mexico I know
Is not the Mexico you know
This Mexico I know
Will disagree with me
But likely say nothing
This Mexico I know
Grips with reverie at the white man who writes and sings and confuses in it
He comes and fascinates at its freedoms - there is only irony under the sun
This Mexico I know is not the same Mexico for the
Boy from Hidalgo who came to the city with his guitar and Mother’s jacket
The Mexico I know is not the pieces of people on the fronts of the newspapers,
on the black and white corners in the color morning
Blood and limbs
Blood and limbs
This Mexico I know
Is not the one of the
Man in suburban Pittsburgh at the bagel store
Reading of tunnels and motorbikes and magic
Wind in the New York Times
But this Mexico I know is being visited by the empty
This Mexico I know is not the one of the suited men
Whose children yell over American cigarettes
At the Irish Bar in Condesa
The Mexico I know
Is not the race to predictability
on and in the television songs gifted by governments
to the family on the ranches of Durango
The Mexico I know sees itself in everything, wondering where it fits
This Mexico I know
Is not the Mexico known by the middle aged man father of three
hospital worker organ orphan
shouting ”maestro" at me because I learned some tricks on a box with strings my parents paid for
This Mexico I know is not the one
of the President with extended chest, at the cheap podium in front of his employees,
purposefully syllabic, “ we are defending our institutions”
That he must know are as broken as his heart
This Mexico I know is scared
This Mexico I know
Is not the same as the mother in Guerrero who lost her child in the great betrayal of humanity, its weaponizing of itself
But this Mexico I know
Needs no sympathy
Whether it asks for it or not
The Mexico I know laughs at itself but not the rest
The Mexico I know is the symptom of our madly invented impulse world, in both beauty and disgrace
And the naked heart
A lung fallen into itself
Choking on its speaking
This Mexico I know
Walks its blood without skin
It is all the broken us
In shouting sun
And it is the perfect us
In the same wicked, shadeless, shriek of sun
This Mexico I know is trying to find the bright in me
For that, and the rest, I’ll love it forever
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