释义 |
Definition of mariachi in English: mariachinounPlural mariachis ˌmarɪˈɑːtʃiˌmärēˈäCHē 1as modifier Denoting a type of traditional Mexican folk music, performed by a small group of strolling musicians. 墨西哥流浪乐队,墨西哥街头民乐队 Example sentencesExamples - Their music is a weirdly wonderful post-rock fusion of TexMex rock and country blues, bebop jazz and exotic Mexican mariachi, loneliness and longing, Lee Hazlewood and Ennio Morricone.
- I always enjoyed a diverse mix growing up, from mariachi to roadhouse music.
- Chuck arrives to a fanfare of mariachi violins.
- On the first weekend in December, La Fiesta de Tumacacori celebrates regional culture with native crafts, foods, and a mariachi mass.
- Formed while they were still at school, this band of frenetic performers combine the wild sounds of ska, mariachi, polka, cumbia and hip-hop into one swirling dervish of sound and vision.
- It was four Hispanic guys dressed in full mariachi garb, head to toe.
- According to the guide book, there were also mariachi groups that had many permanent fans.
- It's easy to perceive the Super Furries as too ambitious for their own good, as they cavort guilelessly from West Coast rock to nosebleed techno, from mariachi to calypso.
- But even love's lament is upbeat in mariachi, a musical genre bursting with the passion of Mexico.
- The music is country, blues, folk mariachi, rockabilly and everything else you can think of.
- The show closed with a rousing mariachi finale.
- Their most eclectic record to date, Sea Of No Cares is the result of the quartet experimenting with flamenco guitars and mariachi trumpets.
- Salsa without drums and horns, tejano without accordion and guitars, mariachi without trumpets would become something else.
- While in Mexico he heard a mariachi tune called ‘Frenesi.’
- Mexican jumping beans Los De Abajo followed with a frenetic performance of rock, salsa, mariachi and ska all rolled in to one.
- They are playing some evocative mariachi but I can't quite hear it clearly enough.
- Although usually connected with mariachi, rancheras are performed by all regional Mexican music ensembles.
- The band starts playin’ some mariachi and a hot mama steps onto the dance floor.
- At 2: 30 a.m., a Mexican breakfast was served, accompanied by the tunes of a 15-member mariachi ensemble.
- All the mariachi player wanted to do was to be like his father, his grandfather, and his great grandfather before him, but fate did not unfold as he had hoped.
- 1.1 A musician in a group performing mariachi music.
a town where roving mariachis still appear on Saturday nights as modifier a mariachi band Example sentencesExamples - Our neighbours appeared to be keeping several groups of mariachis in business, and by the time we had downed our third margarita, we were also addicted to the joyous local song, Camino de Guanajuato.
- This man is Riders of Rebus who like a modern day mariachi emanates unpretentious, rocking pop tunes with spiky guitars and quirky melodies.
- During the period of study, the mariachis performed at the Arizona State Senate, the International Mariachi Festival, and numerous local concerts.
- And then you get to feast on the best Mexican food the desert has to offer at our Fiesta Dinner, complete with mariachis!
- Members of the University of Texas Show Band will perform, as will mariachis from Brownsville.
- There are chorizo-and-egg burritos in the morning, and mariachis on weekend nights, if that's your sort of thing.
- The lively tunes of mariachis greeted well-heeled members of the Rienzi Society to the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston house museum recently for that group's sixth annual dinner.
- A mariachi was singing about the travails of life and working his guitar hard.
- The folk hero was dressed like a Mexican mariachi, in a long black coat - with a big white 10-gallon hat added.
- They are chairing the Institute of Hispanic Culture's presentation Saturday of world-renowned mariachi Vargas de Taclitlán.
- I thought casting Enrique Iglesias as a mariachi was pretty clever too, though I would totally get that mole removed if I were him.
- The first film tells the story of a mariachi in the wrong place mistaken for someone else.
- It is a custom to have a band or group of mariachis playing at this final ceremony.
- We use triggers, calls from the drums or the trumpets, like with mariachis.
- There are other stories - the mariachis who play beautiful sad songs for you as you sit and drink beer in the plaza.
- On 24th Street, youngsters dressed in red lounge on the steps of McDonald's, unmindful of wandering mariachis, Christians proselytizing in Spanish and old women selling roses and tamales.
- The mariachis packed away their instruments, the stage was torn apart, and the sound system that was to have brought the PRI's ‘Fiesta of Triumph’ to the nation was dismantled.
- The mariachis were swinging, the margaritas were chilling, the River Walk was overflowing.
OriginFrom Mexican Spanish mariache, mariachi 'street singer'. Definition of mariachi in US English: mariachinounˌmärēˈäCHē 1as modifier Denoting a type of traditional Mexican folk music, typically performed by a small group of strolling musicians dressed in native costume. 墨西哥流浪乐队,墨西哥街头民乐队 Example sentencesExamples - The band starts playin’ some mariachi and a hot mama steps onto the dance floor.
- It's easy to perceive the Super Furries as too ambitious for their own good, as they cavort guilelessly from West Coast rock to nosebleed techno, from mariachi to calypso.
- The music is country, blues, folk mariachi, rockabilly and everything else you can think of.
- According to the guide book, there were also mariachi groups that had many permanent fans.
- Although usually connected with mariachi, rancheras are performed by all regional Mexican music ensembles.
- I always enjoyed a diverse mix growing up, from mariachi to roadhouse music.
- At 2: 30 a.m., a Mexican breakfast was served, accompanied by the tunes of a 15-member mariachi ensemble.
- All the mariachi player wanted to do was to be like his father, his grandfather, and his great grandfather before him, but fate did not unfold as he had hoped.
- The show closed with a rousing mariachi finale.
- Formed while they were still at school, this band of frenetic performers combine the wild sounds of ska, mariachi, polka, cumbia and hip-hop into one swirling dervish of sound and vision.
- But even love's lament is upbeat in mariachi, a musical genre bursting with the passion of Mexico.
- While in Mexico he heard a mariachi tune called ‘Frenesi.’
- Their most eclectic record to date, Sea Of No Cares is the result of the quartet experimenting with flamenco guitars and mariachi trumpets.
- It was four Hispanic guys dressed in full mariachi garb, head to toe.
- Mexican jumping beans Los De Abajo followed with a frenetic performance of rock, salsa, mariachi and ska all rolled in to one.
- On the first weekend in December, La Fiesta de Tumacacori celebrates regional culture with native crafts, foods, and a mariachi mass.
- Chuck arrives to a fanfare of mariachi violins.
- Their music is a weirdly wonderful post-rock fusion of TexMex rock and country blues, bebop jazz and exotic Mexican mariachi, loneliness and longing, Lee Hazlewood and Ennio Morricone.
- They are playing some evocative mariachi but I can't quite hear it clearly enough.
- Salsa without drums and horns, tejano without accordion and guitars, mariachi without trumpets would become something else.
- 1.1 A musician in a mariachi group.
墨西哥流浪民乐队队员,墨西哥街头民乐队队员 a town where roving mariachis still appear on Saturday nights as modifier a mariachi band Example sentencesExamples - Members of the University of Texas Show Band will perform, as will mariachis from Brownsville.
- I thought casting Enrique Iglesias as a mariachi was pretty clever too, though I would totally get that mole removed if I were him.
- And then you get to feast on the best Mexican food the desert has to offer at our Fiesta Dinner, complete with mariachis!
- A mariachi was singing about the travails of life and working his guitar hard.
- Our neighbours appeared to be keeping several groups of mariachis in business, and by the time we had downed our third margarita, we were also addicted to the joyous local song, Camino de Guanajuato.
- The mariachis packed away their instruments, the stage was torn apart, and the sound system that was to have brought the PRI's ‘Fiesta of Triumph’ to the nation was dismantled.
- This man is Riders of Rebus who like a modern day mariachi emanates unpretentious, rocking pop tunes with spiky guitars and quirky melodies.
- There are chorizo-and-egg burritos in the morning, and mariachis on weekend nights, if that's your sort of thing.
- The mariachis were swinging, the margaritas were chilling, the River Walk was overflowing.
- The folk hero was dressed like a Mexican mariachi, in a long black coat - with a big white 10-gallon hat added.
- During the period of study, the mariachis performed at the Arizona State Senate, the International Mariachi Festival, and numerous local concerts.
- On 24th Street, youngsters dressed in red lounge on the steps of McDonald's, unmindful of wandering mariachis, Christians proselytizing in Spanish and old women selling roses and tamales.
- They are chairing the Institute of Hispanic Culture's presentation Saturday of world-renowned mariachi Vargas de Taclitlán.
- We use triggers, calls from the drums or the trumpets, like with mariachis.
- The lively tunes of mariachis greeted well-heeled members of the Rienzi Society to the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston house museum recently for that group's sixth annual dinner.
- The first film tells the story of a mariachi in the wrong place mistaken for someone else.
- It is a custom to have a band or group of mariachis playing at this final ceremony.
- There are other stories - the mariachis who play beautiful sad songs for you as you sit and drink beer in the plaza.
OriginFrom Mexican Spanish mariache, mariachi ‘street singer’. |