Making Connections in Mexico City

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Students on two trips were immersed in music, Spanish, and social entrepreneurship.

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Students and others gathered in a green and orange room
On a tour of 鈥淣ew L.A鈥 in Mexico City last month, students on a Magnuson Center-Rassias Center trip visited Casa de los Amigos, a social-justice oriented guesthouse which was, decades ago, the home of artist Jos茅 Clemente Orozco. His studio in the building is now a Quaker library and meeting room. (Photo by Katie Lenhart)
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From performing in one of Latin America鈥檚 premier concert halls to seeing, firsthand, efforts to safeguard Indigenous heritage, more than 60 Dartmouth students immersed themselves in the culture of Mexico City during two very different, if equally unforgettable, trips over spring break.

Last month, 10 students joined the  and the  for a  of social entrepreneurship. Nearby, the 50-member  was on  showcasing new work by Mexican composers.

The trips converged for a wind ensemble performance on March 24, the day before the students, faculty, and staff departed the city, carrying with them what many participants described as a deeper sense of connection with each other and their Mexican counterparts.

Each trip was part of a broader initiative. The wind ensemble tour grew out of the , which aims to bring Mexican compositions to the international stage and provide opportunities for Mexican composers. And the Magnuson鈥檚 Social Entrepreneurship Experience reflects the center鈥檚 growing focus on societal issues.

The Magnuson-Rassias Social Entrepreneurship experience

鈥淪ometimes people think entrepreneurship is just Silicon Valley or other for-profit businesses,鈥 says Jamie Coughlin, the center鈥檚 founding director. But Magnuson鈥檚 Social Entrepreneurship program, launched in 2021, gives students pathways for developing socially inspired business ideas and bringing students, faculty and staff together around issues like environmental conservation and sustainable economic development.

Last month鈥檚 interactive trip took students 鈥渋nto a market that has some of those elements,鈥 Coughlin says.

Starting with the pandemic, Mexico City has seen a huge influx of digital nomads and a spike in start-ups, says Kathleen Burke, a program manager at Magnuson who co-led the trip.

Among those are social entrepreneurs who have designed business models to address problems ranging from corruption and election fraud to climate change and economic development.

鈥淲e knew that Mexico City would embody the spirit of resilience that social entrepreneurship necessitates,鈥 Burke says.

During their week in Mexico City and the surrounding areas, students got an up-close look at social entrepreneur-led ventures.

Traveling by bus, they met a politician and founder of the nonprofit Mexicans Against Corruption and Impunity, who described the challenges he faces in his work, and how he employs creativity to surmount them.

At Ehecalli, an innovative ecotourism center, they built a composting toilet, experienced a traditional sweat lodge, and conversed at length with founder Nando Aus铆n 鈥06 about sustainability, including just how much there is to learn from indigenous populations. They toured Xochimilco Ecological Park and Plant Market, a 400-acre reserve that utilizes ancient farming methods to grow food in a sustainable way.

For Yuniza Limeta 鈥24, of Los Angeles, seeing the park鈥檚 floating gardens, or chinampas, was a highlight.

鈥淚t was amazing to see people continuing to use chinampas as a form of traditional indigenous agriculture,鈥 says Limeta, a geography major minoring in human-centered design. 鈥淗earing others spotlight a food-growing tradition of hundreds or thousands of years as nothing alternative, but an environmentally sustainable legacy, was thrilling.鈥

John Ejiogu 鈥23, who is from Nigeria, says the week in Mexico has already changed his life鈥攖he way he talks with friends who are struggling, his approach to challenges, and even how he no longer leaves the water running when he brushes his teeth.

The economics major has been involved with the  throughout his time in Hanover and is interested in how standards of living in developing countries could be improved for a majority of the population.

鈥淎ll of the activities we did were connected to making the world a better place,鈥 Ejiogu says.

Yet another facet of the program involved a visit to the building where Mexican artist Jos茅 Clemente Orozco lived and had his studio, which is now home to a Quaker library and meeting room. Orozco鈥檚 mural , painted between 1932 and 1934, is one of Dartmouth鈥檚 artistic treasures.

In addition to Burke and Maggie Ronan, who is the Magnuson program manager for startup support, the students were accompanied by , director Dartmouth鈥檚 Rassias Center for World Languages and Cultures, and , a lecturer in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese.

As Magnuson expands its social entrepreneurship programs, the partnership with Rassias Center is just one way Magnuson is leveraging expertise across campus, says Coughlin.

Magnuson has recently begun working to create curricular offerings, says Coughlin. A credit-bearing Arts Entrepreneurship course in the Department of Music he developed with wind ensemble director  debuted this term. The class has been well-received, with about 30 students enrolled, representing interests ranging from theater to studio art. 

Wind ensemble shares music

Collaboration was also integral to the wind ensemble trip. It showcased new works by Mexican composers, most of which were commissioned by 天美影视kins Center for the Arts or created through the Mexican Repertoire Initiative, which Messier founded.

Having been postponed by the pandemic, the visit to Mexico City represents the culmination of several years鈥 work.

鈥淭his is our first opportunity to really share this music, not only here in the U.S., but with our Mexican partners in this music making,鈥 says Messier. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a really exciting time to bring the people together around this music.鈥

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Lucy Langenberg playing a wind instrument in a concert hall
Lucy Langenberg 鈥22 plays the contrabassoon during a recording session in Sala Nezahualc贸yotl, a premier performance venue in Mexico City. See more Wind Ensemble trips photos. (Photo by Katie Lenhart)

Throughout the week, the wind ensemble teamed up with two local bands鈥攆irst, the community-based Centro de Capacitaci贸n de M煤sica de Banda, and later Banda Sinf贸nica de la Facultad de M煤sica de la Universidad Nacional Aut贸noma de M茅xico.

The students rehearsed, side by side, for hours. They shared meals and laughs. Then, they took to the stage for performances in two venerable concert halls, where appreciative audiences included most of the composers whose works were being performed.

Rodrigo 鈥淩oy鈥 Mart铆nez Torres, a digital musics graduate student in the Guarini School of Graduate and Advanced Studies, was sitting with the other composers when he heard his Onda Tropical performed live for the first and second times, in Teatro Principal, Puebla, and Sala Nezahualc贸yotl.

鈥淲e would all be crying,鈥 said Mart铆nez Torres, who collaborated with Abi Pak 鈥26 on the 天美影视-commissioned selection for diatonic accordion and wind ensemble.

Mart铆nez Torres says Pak 鈥渄id an amazing job鈥 performing the piece, which includes plenty of space for improvisation.

鈥淪ometimes, as a creator, you want to just focus on your own idea as the sole and final one,鈥 but leaving the accordion part in Pak鈥檚 hands was the best choice, he says. 鈥淚 can trust that she鈥檒l do better than I can in writing any type of melody, and she trusted me in organizing the whole narrative.鈥

Messier says the programs, which consisted solely of original Mexican music, were highly unusual.

Public school music programs in the U.S. usually include wind ensembles, but wind bands in Mexico are community-based, and typically lack funds to buy or commission music, so they often rely on handwritten transcriptions, he says. And as in the U.S., music in Mexico 鈥渉as been very Eurocentric.鈥

And Mart铆nez Torres describes the Mexican Repertoire Initiative as a 鈥渧ery fortunate merging鈥 of needs: that of a burgeoning musical culture in Mexico 鈥渢hat wants to get out,鈥 and of 鈥渞eally amazing ensembles that you can find all over the U.S. to play it.鈥

Oboist Sophia Sulimirski 鈥23, student manager of the wind ensemble, says she wasn鈥檛 sure what to expect from the trip.

But from playing with guest conductors, to interacting with the composers, to just getting lunch with the other musicians, it 鈥渂lew my expectations out of the park,鈥 says Sulimirski, an environmental studies and biology major from Westchester County, N.Y. 鈥淚 made so many new friendships and watched so many new friendships emerge.鈥

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Dartmouth students posing for a photo
Some students and staff from the Magnuson Center Social Entrepreneurship trip and the Dartmouth College Wind Ensemble after the musicians鈥 final performance in Mexico City, which the Magnuson students attended. (Photo by Katie Lenhart)

That struck him as well, says Messier, who found himself tearing up during a rehearsal.

The moment a conductor stopped to review a passage, the students from Dartmouth and the Mexican bands started chatting, even though many of them didn鈥檛 speak the same language. 鈥淚t was like any band room, any music rehearsal where they鈥檙e talking and you鈥檙e like, 鈥楪uys, settle down,鈥欌 he says.

The next day, Messier shared his observation with the students.

鈥淭he fact that everyone in between sets is just chatting is exactly why we鈥檙e here,鈥 Sulimirski recalls him saying. 鈥淵ou guys are being super obnoxious, but it鈥檚 fantastic.鈥

It was one of her favorite moments, Sulimirski says. 鈥淚t was really touching to see that this is ultimately why we are here, to make those connections and to play awesome music.鈥

Photos of Magnuson Trip    Photos of Wind Ensemble Trip
Trips Coverage Roundup

 

 

Aimee Minbiole