"Waila Music"
contributed by Heather Meeks, Michael Mensah, and Ashley Cobb
Music 334 Professor Sturman
October 14, 2002
Waila music is the traditional social dance music of the Tohono
O'dham Native Americans of southern Arizona. Pronounced why-la, it is
a hybrid of popular European polka and waltzes with a variety of Mexican
influences mixed in. It originated in the 1800's and comes from the
word "baile" which is Spanish for "dance". Waila
music began with early fiddle bands, and the performers adapted music
from European immigrants as well as northern Mexican tunes. Unlike norteño
music, which it resembles, waila is mainly instrumental; only rarely
is it performed with sung lyrics. A typical wail band today features
an accordion, one or two alto saxophones, an electric six-string guitar,
a bass guitar and a drum kit.
The dances that accompany this music tradition are also a blend European
influence with a Native mix. There are five common styles: 1) the waila,
which is like a polka dance, 2) the chote (comes from a folk dance from
Scotland or Germany, the schottishe), 3) the mazurka (a Polish folk
dance), 4) the watersaw (redowa or redova - a Bohemian dance in three
quarter time, an older form) and 5) the newest form, the cumbia (which
originates from Colombia but came to the O'odham via Mexico). O'odham
dance waila in ways that connect with older ceremonial music and dance
traditions in addition to long-standing cultural values (Struman, Janet).
Dancers move with a smooth gliding motion using more of a walking-step
instead of the hopping steps associated with vigorous European polka-dancing.
The O'odham way seems designed to conserve energy when dancing in the
blazing sun or in the lingering evening heat of the Sonoran desert.
Waila music is performed throughout southern Arizona by Tohono O'odham,
Pima and Maricopa musicians. In Tucson, waila music can be heard at
the Annual Waila Festival. The first Waila Festival took place in 1989
and continues to this day. Overall, 60 bands have been presented and
approximately 55,000 people have attended the festival. Presently, this
springtime festival is a place where people can listen to music, dance
and eat O'odham food. Traditional O'odham food such as, cholla buds,
red chile and tepary beans may be served. The Annual Waila Festival
is sponsored in part by the Arizona Historical Society and is directed
by Angelo Joaquin Jr.
Works Cited
"Arizona Waila Festival." Library of Congress Bicentennial.
Local Legacies. 26 June 2001. <http://lcweb.loc.gov/bicentennial/propage/AZ/az_s_mccain4.html>
"Arizona." <http://www.travelcafe.tv/arizona.html>
Metzner, Jim. Pulse of the Planet Waila Chicken Scratch. Program
# 2124 2000. April. 2002 <http://www.pulseplanet.com/archive/Apr00/2124.html>
Metzner, Jim. Pulse of the Planet Waila Genesis. Program # 2123
2000. April. 2002 <http://www.pulseplanet.com/archive/Apr00/2124.html>
"Contemporary Native American Music." Teachervision.com.
2000 Netscape.
<http://webcenter.netscape.teachervision.com/lesson-plans/lesson-7429.html>
Sturman, Janet. Movement Analysis as a Tool for Understanding Identity:
Retentions, Borrowings, and Transformations in Native American Waila.
1997:51 69
Bibliography
Griffith, James S. Southern Arizona Folk Arts. The University
of Arizona Press, Tuscon: 1998.
Nettl, Bruno; Ruth Stone, James Porter, Timothy Rice. Garland Encyclopedia
of World Music. New York: Garland Publishing., 1998-2000.
Tucson Meet Yourself. October 13, 1984. Reel 11, Tape II. Accordian
Styles Workshop