
Fiesta San Antonio's playlist: Gritos and cumbias
Hair-raising gritos and "ay ay ay" chants from the cumbia circle aren't just background noise. They're part of what makes Fiesta, San Antonio's 11-day annual party, feel like a citywide family party.
The vibe: Anthony Medrano, a violinist with the mariachi group Campanas de America, tells Axios that music is woven into Fiesta's fabric — just as Fiesta is into the city's multicultural identity.
"It's just a beautiful blend of every type of music accompanied with a beer and a cascarón," he says.
It's a mix that DJ Noland "Menyo" Arocha, who will spin at Fiesta De Los Reyes, has mastered over 10 years: accordion-heavy cumbias, a sprinkle of country and a dash of freestyle.
Both agree: Fiesta is made for sing-alongs.
What they're saying: "They want to dance, everyone wants to wave their hands in the air and spill their beer a bit," Medrano says. "It's also a time for gritos."
State of play: Arocha and Medrano obliged us by adding a few songs to our always-growing Fiesta playlist. A new addition was "Don't Stop the Party" by Pitbull, submitted by Arocha.
"Even though the cops tell everyone to go home, they still continue partying. That song is so true to Fiesta — I think Pitbull wrote it for Fiesta," he jokes.
Zoom out: When they're not performing, they each have go-to spots to take in the sounds.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fox News
3 hours ago
- Fox News
Former Biden officials ridicule Karine Jean-Pierre's book as 'bizarre cash grab'
Several former Biden officials and staffers have spoken out against ex-White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre's announcement that she was becoming an independent after serving in a Democratic administration, which came alongside a book announcement. "Everyone thinks this is a grift," a former official told Politico. Jean-Pierre announced Wednesday that her new book, "Independent: A Look Inside a Broken White House, Outside the Party Lines," would be released in October. "SHE was the public face telling us all that this White House was on track and that Biden was amazing. And now she doesn't even want to be a Democrat????" a former Biden White House official told the outlet. "She's making herself the middle ground here when Republicans hate her. She's not in any position to be a connector of our two party system and assuming she could be is just ego." "It's hard to believe someone could look at the past year and genuinely think, 'The party left Joe Biden — that's why I'm leaving the Democratic Party,'" a former senior spokesperson for the Biden administration told Axios. "The hubris of thinking you can position yourself as an outsider when you not only have enjoyed the perks of extreme proximity to power… but have actively wielded it from the biggest pulpit there is, is as breathtaking as it is desperate ... It's difficult to see how this is anything but a bizarre cash grab," another White House communications official told the outlet. "She made a joke about being an independent last year and now it's a book. All ideas are monetary — even the dumb ones," a former Jean-Pierre staffer told Politico. Politico reported that Gilda Squire, a publicist, worked with Jean-Pierre while she was in the White House and was included on multiple official emails, until her staffers said it was an issue and raised it with the White House counsel office. The outlet noted that Jean-Pierre was the subject of a gushing Vogue profile, in addition to a profile in Women's Health. The former press secretary also appeared on "The View" in person and from the White House while she was press secretary. Axios reporter Alex Thompson asked Squire about boosting Jean-Pierre in February 2024 and the publicist said off the record that none of it was true. Thompson reported Thursday, "Internal White House emails obtained later by Axios, however, show that Squire was copied on emails related to Jean-Pierre's publicity work. The messages included a September 2023 email describing plans for a Vogue magazine profile." Former Jean-Pierre staffer, Jeremy Edwards, reacted on X to the book announcement. "Lol," Edwards wrote. Another White House communications official told Axios, "Today Karine lost the only constituency that ever supported her — party line Democrats." White House reporters who covered the Biden administration also criticized Jean-Pierre's announcement. "Did she find the manuscript somewhere in that fat binder she toted around? If I were a historian writing about the Biden White House, I wouldn't ignore what Karine has to say, but it's not an account in which much weight will be invested — just like her briefings," a White House reporter told Fox News Digital. Another White House reporter told Fox News Digital they were "shocked" that Jean-Pierre had left the Democratic Party. "I have to pick my jaw up from the floor. It is unbelievable that she, of all people, would choose this path," the reporter said. Jean-Pierre, a veteran Democratic Party operative who also worked for the 2020 Biden-Harris campaign and served as a spokeswoman for the far-left MoveOn advocacy group, said in a post on Instagram that the book was about not always being in a "partisan stance." Jean-Pierre repeatedly defended Biden when faced with questions about the president's decline, and even laughed at a question about his ability to serve past 2024 during an interview in 2022. Jean-Pierre's publicist did not immediately return a request for comment.


Axios
5 hours ago
- Axios
Nashville's CMA Fest doubles as a four-day music education fundraiser
CMA Fest is taking over downtown Nashville this week, but the event is more than 2 square miles of country music nirvana. It's also a sprawling four-day fundraiser. Why it matters: The CMA Foundation has pumped more than $30 million of festival earnings into music education around the nation. More than half of that total supported K-12 programs in Tennessee. Organizers expect to raise another $2.5 million for the cause during this year's festival. Between the lines: Research shows that music education improves mental health, boosts academic performance and primes kids to become good community members. More than 300 artists perform across the festival's 10 stages. They all donate their time to boost contributions to the cause. What they're saying: CMA Foundation executive director Tiffany Kerns tells Axios that is indicative of "how generous and philanthropic" the genre as a whole can be. "It's one of the things that I love saying to someone when they say, 'Oh, I don't love country music.'" "I'm like, 'Well, let me have you fall in love with the humans behind it that are doing so much good.'" Zoom out: Foundation funding goes toward a wide array of programming, stretching far beyond the boundaries of country music. Funds support K-12 marching bands, rock bands, choirs, mariachi groups and after-school programs for studio engineering. The intrigue: CMA Fest will give students in some of the foundation-backed programs a chance to perform for the tens of thousands of fans expected to attend the festival daily. Marching bands from Ravenwood High School and Stratford STEM Magnet High School are scheduled to perform, as is a student singer-songwriter from Nashville School of the Arts. The Roots of Music marching band from New Orleans, which has gotten foundation funding for nearly a decade, will perform Sunday at Nissan Stadium. They'll take the stage alongside country star Ashley McBryde and are expected to appear on the festival's television special later this month. The bottom line:"I want people to see it more than just this headline that's like, 'CMA Fest is happening — traffic is going to be bad,'" Kerns says. "I want them to really understand that it's actually this beautiful event that is providing so much opportunity for people."


USA Today
8 hours ago
- USA Today
Country singers and parade celebrate Army – and (unofficially) Trump's birthday
Country singers and parade celebrate Army – and (unofficially) Trump's birthday A massive military parade on the streets of Washington will showcase troops, tanks, weapons, aircraft – and music performers including country singer Scotty Hasting, a former Army infantryman who was wounded in Afghanistan. Country singer Noah Hicks of Nashville and DJ Nyla Symone, one of New York's youngest DJs, will perform at the U.S. Army's Grand Military Parade in Washington. The parade is a celebration of the Army's 250th year, scheduled for June 14 – which is also President Donald Trump's 79th birthday. A concert will feature "5-7 musical acts" with country music performers, not yet identified, according to Axios. Trump is scheduled to speak at the event, which is expected to draw at least 200,000 people. You can register for free tickets to the parade, but they're limited. The two-hour event, a military spectacle and unofficial birthday party, takes place on Constitution Avenue near the National Mall and starts at 6:30 p.m. ET. Events include Army parachuters jumping from aircraft, landing and giving Trump an American flag for his birthday, Pentagon officials said, according to Axios. Trump expressed a desire for a large military parade during his first administration. That did not happen, but the president is playing a major role in the Army celebration, which now includes the parade, Reuters reported. Where will the parade start and end? Unable to view our graphics? Click here to see them. The celebration day begins with a wreath-laying ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery in the morning. Events include "historical U.S. Army personnel reenactors, period-accurate equipment, vehicles, impressive flyovers, and military bands," according to America 250, the organizer. What's in the Army parade? For the celebration, the U.S. Army is bringing in: 7,500 troops 28 M1 Abrams tanks 28 Bradley Infantry Fighting Vehicles 4 Paladin self-propelled howitzer cannons 50 Apache, Black Hawk and Chinook helicopters The vehicles will be transported by train, and the helicopters will be flown in. Vintage warplanes, including a World War II-era B-17 bomber and a P-51 Mustang fighter, are set to fly over the National Mall. The parade will cross in front of Trump's viewing stand on Constitution Avenue south of the White House at about 6 p.m. Trump is expected to preside over the enlistment and reenlistment of soldiers at the end of the parade. The event will end with fireworks at dusk. How much will the parade cost? The latest price tag for the parade is $30 million, a figure that could rise as high as $45 million. Though the Army is expected to pay for any damage from tanks rolling through the streets of the capital, it's "not expecting damage" to the roads, officials said. CONTRIBUTING Cybele Mayes-Osterman, Tom Vanden Brook SOURCE USA TODAY Network reporting and research; Reuters; America 250