When Adrian Quesada brought his Boleros PsicodĂ©licos project to the Austin City Limits stage last year in our Season 48, one of his featured guests was singer and violinist Mireya Ramos, who brought the house down with an impassioned performance of the Latin love song âTus Tormentas.â With her musical partner Shae Fiol, Ramos leads the Latin Grammy-winning and Grammy-nominated New York mariachi group Flor de Toloache, and it became clear after her appearance with Quesada that an invitation to the band to tape their own show was inevitable. We were thrilled to have the five-piece combo join us in support of their latest recording Motherflower.
Eschewing the traditional mariachi outfits for clothes more glittery, Mona Seda (trumpet), Claudia Rascon (guitar), and Vaneza Calderon (guitarron) strummed a slow mariachi beat before Ramos arrived to begin âBolero Para ti Motherflower,â the defiant title track to Motherflower. Ramosâ voice soared and swirled, joined by her partner Fiolâs on the second verse, both women pulling every ounce of emotion out of the lyrics. Fiol picked up her vihuela and Ramos her violin for the cumbia âBailando Penas,â driven by both the danceable rhythm and Sedaâs melodic trumpet lines. On the ballad âEsta Ranchera,â which Ramos called their tribute to Patsy Cline, Fiol switched to flute, while she and her partner shifted from Spanish to English and back to enforce the emotion behind the heartbreak ballad.
âThis is another women empowerment song,â noted Ramos, before double violins from she and Rascon kicked off âRuiseñor,â a tune from the bandâs Las Caras Lindas album – and one that featured clogging, pizzicatto violin, and whistling during the breakdown. âThis is the most personal song [on Motherflower], said Ramos in the lead up to âBrinda por Ella.â âYou have to love yourself before you can love anyone else. Itâs okay to take yourself out on a date once in a while!â That sentiment adorned a joyful 6/8 groove and sparkling violin from Ramos.
The band then invited Grammy-winning producer and musician Adrian Quesada – âa legend here and around the worldâ – to join them onstage with his Telecaster. He gave a new texture to the gorgeous Motherflower ballad âSoledad,â a song written during the pandemic – appropriately enough – since the English translation is âLoneliness.â
After Quesada left the stage, Ramos introduced the next song âLet Downâ as a fusion of ranchera, blues, and R&B. A showcase for the golden-voiced Fiol, its writer, the tune was originally featured in the bandâs Tiny Desk Concert, which helped introduce the quintet to the wider world. Ramos and Seda also engaged in some playful locking of horns with their violin and trumpet. The group then paid tribute to their styleâs history with the âHuapango Medley,â starting with the Trini Lopez classic âMalagueña Salerosa,â and including mariachi standards âEl Pastorâ and âLa Cigarra.â For the ranchera âRegresa Ya,â written by Ramos for a bandmate going through a breakup, the group asked for an assist from the enthusiastic audience. All five members gave a brief workshop in the art of the grito, those spontaneous cries that punctuate the emotional heft of a good mariachi ballad. The crowd was already primed for participation, inserting gritos into the luminous heartbreak ballad without prompting.
After that exercise in tradition, the quintet jumped feet first into another arena, dazzling with a briskly performed medley of contemporary hard rock songs, incorporating riffs, melodies, and lyrics from Rage Against the Machine, Nirvana (both âCome As You Areâ and âSmells Like Teen Spiritâ), and Led Zeppelin. The temperature level was already spiked by that epic performance, so Flor kept it going with the cumbia âDicen,â which got the audience dancing and singing along in call-and-response. The band closed the set with âBesos de Mezcal,â a tune that drew just as heavily on crowd participation, with the Austin crowd singing the chorus alongside Fiol and Ramos. The latter also led the audience in some enthusiastic cries of âTikki-tikki-ta!â
The theater went wild after the magical set, as well they should have. Weâve never had a show quite like this before, and weâre excited for everyone to see it when it airs this fall as part of our upcoming Season 49 of Austin City Limits on your local PBS station.Â







































