Natividad Cano

Mexican Mariachi Musician
A man playing a string instrument.

Photo by Tom Pich

Bio

Natividad Cano was born on July 23, 1933, in the small village of Ahuisculco, Mexico. In this region of the western Mexican state of Jalisco and its capital city, Guadalajara, the musical ensemble known as mariachi originated in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries with the stringed instruments brought from Spain. It took its current form in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries through the musical creations of farmers, ranchers, and jornaleros (day laborers), who combined the instrumentation of the guitarrón (bass guitar), vihuela (small rhythm guitar), violins, and trumpets.

Cano's family were jornaleros who played mariachi music in their free time. His grandfather, Catarino Cano, was a self-taught guitarrón player, and his father, Sotero Cano, was a versatile musician who was skilled at playing all the mariachi stringed instruments. In 1939, Sotero began teaching his six-year-old son, Natividad (nicknamed "Nati"), to play the vihuela. Two years later, Nati enrolled at the Academia de Música in Guadalajara to study the violin. After six years at the Academia, Nati left, against the wishes of his instructor, Ignacio Camerena, to join his father and help support his family by playing in local cantinas and cafes.

In 1950, Cano persuaded his father to let him travel to the border town of Mexicali to join the Mariachi Chapala. "I have to follow my dreams," he told his father. Though he was the youngest musician in the group by at least 10 years, he soon became the Mariachi's musical arranger. He stayed with the Mariachi Chapala for seven years before immigrating in 1960 to Los Angeles. There he joined Mariachi Aguila, the house ensemble at the famous Million Dollar Theatre, a major stopping point on the Mexican professional circuit. Upon the death of the group's director, José Frías, Cano became the new leader and renamed the group Los Camperos (The Countrymen), the name it has borne to this day.

After spending several years touring throughout the United States, Cano and the original six members of Los Camperos settled in Los Angeles in 1967 and opened La Fonda restaurant, at which they have performed regularly ever since. La Fonda soon gained a reputation as an important center of Mexican culture in Los Angeles. For Cano, the restaurant became the medium through which he accomplished his personal mission of maintaining high artistic standards while enhancing public awareness of the mariachi tradition.

In the 1990s, Cano devoted himself to sharing his musical knowledge with young people and to the cultivation of greater public understanding and respect for the music to which he has devoted his life. In Los Angeles, he initiated "mariachi-in-education" programs at public schools and lent his name, expertise, and resources to the Hispanic Women's Council's Nati Cano Cultural Arts Awards in Latin performing arts. Cano has donated his time at numerous concerts to benefit the Mexican American community. At the national level, he has been a major figure as teacher, performer, competition judge, and benefactor in the growing number of mariachi festivals throughout the Southwest.