I am an interdisciplinary scholar, sound artist, and independent publisher

A selection of my work from 2019-2025

  • Revista de Estudios Hispánicos, vol. 57, no. 3, 2023 [published 2024], pp. 453–75.

    Abstract: Boleros, guarachas, and other popular music rhythms resonate across Gabriel García Márquez's work. Despite this, only a few mentions of cumbias appear in his novels, letters, short stories, and other writing. The present study analyzes the changes in Gabo's capacity to listen to cumbias and cumbiambas in his work across time. I show that, in early work, cumbia appears as an event incapable of producing semiosis, and Gabo is unable to fully listen to it. This inability gradually shifts, however, towards a listening for cumbia as sameness when reproduction technologies like film and vinyl make Caribbean music widely available and desirable.

    Analyzing GGM's columns for the newspaper El Universal (1948) and personal correspondence about the documentary Un carnaval para toda la vida (1961), I read Gabo's shifting attention to cumbia as a result of what I call "distant listening," a listening practice and positionality in which the authorial I perceives certain sound events as alien, thus preventing sound from entering the literary archive. Cumbia elicits GGM's attention when Caribbean music becomes available in reproducible media such as film and vinyl. Cumbias on vinyl help him produce what I call a "reproducible authentic," associated with a letrado listening positionality that listens for generic features in cumbia. That is, a cumbia that represents an authentic cultural manifestation using reproducible media such as vinyl records and film while maintaining the properties of a non-semiotic event.

  • Studies in Latin American popular culture, 2024-06, Vol. 42, p.145-171

    Abstract: This article analyzes the album cover visuality of the tropical music orchestra Pedro Laza y sus pelayeros in Colombia (1954–1973) with other “sabanero sound” orchestras of the time, such as La Sonora Cordobesa (1959–1969), the orchestra of Clímaco Sarmiento, and big-band sound orchestras, such as that of Lucho Bermúdez. This corpus’s graphic, geographic, and racial symbolisms form racial tensions similar to a “contact zone” in which different visual and sonic expectations interact. My analysis shows that, unlike a sonic color line, there is not one single public this music is oriented toward, nor a type of racial representation linked to one single consumer expectation. Instead, I find a series of tensions in the use of white- mestizo and Black bodies and geographical references. My analysis supports two arguments: one, that bodies of color appear metonymized in musical instruments to authenticate geographically, racially, and generically-sexually the Caribbean rhythms as “Black” and “hot.” Metonymies are one of the
    ways the recording industry “tropicalizes” the Colombian Caribbean. I explore other strategies, such as portraying rural environments with an intent to appeal to wider audiences, both rural and urban. Two, the woman’s figure as a “modern girl” authorizes the mass consumption of this music in mestizo and creole layers of the Colombian urban middle class and nationalizes the idea of Colombian mestizaje as an unmixed racial juxtaposition.
    Keywords: discography, tropical music, Colombia, cultural studies, contact zone, race, album covers, mestizaje.

Recent Peer-Reviewed Publications

A group of people gathered outdoors, some holding bottles or containers, and one person is drinking from a bottle. The scene appears to be casual and social.
Album cover of Pedro Laza y su Banda featuring a woman with a hat, sitting on a drum set, accompanied by a tuba in the background. The cover includes titles of songs and the record label, Discos Fuentes.
  • Text here

    In honor of the centennial of the Nettie Lee Benson Latin American Collection, the 2022 Lozano Long Conference focuses on archives with Latin American perspectives to better visualize the ethical and political implications of archival practices globally. Cristina Rivera Garza visited the collection as the keynote speaker for the conference, which was held in February 2022. This Not Even Past publication is joined by those of other graduate students at the University of Texas at Austin.  The series is designed to engage with the work of individual speakers, as well as to present valuable resources that supplement the conference’s recorded presentations. This new conference model, which will make online resources freely and permanently available, aims to reach audiences beyond conference attendees, to decolonize and democratize access to the production of knowledge. The conference recordings and connected articles can be found here.

Recent Non Peer-Reviewed Publications

Cristina Rivera Garza, taken at Tec de Monterrey, Campus Ciudad de Mexico Source: Leigh Thelmadatter

From the Center Out - Archiving Black Dance in the U.S.

Gesel, a choreographer living in Austin, Texas, walks us through solos that a hip-hop dancer and an expressionist dancer taught her over 10 years ago. "From the Center Out - archiving Black dance in the U.S." is about how a dancer's body remembers and what those memories sound like. During rehearsal, we're transported to scenes from the solos, and we experience the stories and emotions driving them.

According to xmtr.fm:

“As Gesel dances, she talks, and through her voice we experience her movement in a visceral, sometimes uncomfortable way. If you’ve ever wondered how dance could be represented just through sound, this piece does exactly that”.

Production + Editing by Laura Marina Boria
Production + Sound Design + Editing Ana Cecilia Calle

Selected: Radiophrenia Festival, Scotland, 2021.

Also aired: XMTR.FM, November, 2021.

My Doméstika course

Narrativas sonoras: cómo contar historias con sonido

3112 COURSE Ana Cecilia Calle [WRI] 007.jpg

Dial. Conjuro sónico

One-minute piece created for the compilation "Conjuro Sónico". Organized by Festival En Tiempo Real, "Conjuro Sónico" aims to gather musicians and sound artists from different parts of the world to conjure and reflect on the civil uprising that took place in Colombia during Spring of 2021.

Aired: Radio Caso, centro de arte sonoro, Argentina, 2022.