This style of music comes from Europe! When it got to Mexico, it was danced by the high class during the time of "El Porfiriato," "Las Bicicletas" is an example of a popular polka song from that era. The working class adopted this music by adding faster beats and different instruments, and it morphed in to what you see in this video!
@@AlejandrofromMexico faster beat didnt come fromt he working class, it came from the czechs who tend to dance polka in a faster beat LOL you should travel to central europe
Huh... that's actually really cool. 😎 this is real humanity, people from different places and cultures sharing a passion for the same fun activities. 🎉🎉🎉
How tf did they colonizers bring it over? That’s makes no logical sense. Mexico became independent in 1821. By 1830 when polkas started it wasn’t a colony. And the Czechs weren’t colonizers. Unless Spanish people brought the music over but again they wouldn’t be colonizers after 1821. And it’s also likely that we got it from Czech immigrants in Texas. NL TA and TX were very connected back then. A lot of historians argue that we got the accordion from them and we copied their música hence why we have polkas redovas and chotis. But other argue it came from central Mexico since they had accordions early as well. I think the former is more likely due to the fact norteño and tejano music are distinct from what became popular in central Mexico.
Sounds like the music I hear in the background at German mini markets.
Except the Mexican one is more upbeat.
This style of music comes from Europe! When it got to Mexico, it was danced by the high class during the time of "El Porfiriato," "Las Bicicletas" is an example of a popular polka song from that era.
The working class adopted this music by adding faster beats and different instruments, and it morphed in to what you see in this video!
@@AlejandrofromMexico faster beat didnt come fromt he working class, it came from the czechs who tend to dance polka in a faster beat LOL you should travel to central europe
I love both Mexican and original polka, some of the most vibrant music.
Huh... that's actually really cool. 😎 this is real humanity, people from different places and cultures sharing a passion for the same fun activities. 🎉🎉🎉
This video brings me so much joy
Me parece tan interesante que somos un país tan pequeño pero impactamos bastante el mundo me parece 🥰 saludos desde Austria 🇦🇹
No tan pequeño
Gracias a dios por todos los que construyeron la cultura Mexicana.
I mean seriously, Germans make polka mellow but thanks to you it got the spark again. It's supposed to fast fun dance with lot of movement.
this should have more views!
That was fun to watch. Thank you!
Beautiful ❤❤❤
I’m not sure if we should call the Germans, Czech, Austrian, and Polish settlers colonizers.
I agree, they were migrants
@@mexicoball42no they were colonizers by defenition. They benefited from native marginalization just like everyone else
Que hermosa melodía
👏🏻🤩 excelente
They were not colonizers, they were settlers and immigrants! It was not their colony
Wooow eso es en Río bravo
How tf did they colonizers bring it over? That’s makes no logical sense. Mexico became independent in 1821. By 1830 when polkas started it wasn’t a colony. And the Czechs weren’t colonizers. Unless Spanish people brought the music over but again they wouldn’t be colonizers after 1821.
And it’s also likely that we got it from Czech immigrants in Texas. NL TA and TX were very connected back then. A lot of historians argue that we got the accordion from them and we copied their música hence why we have polkas redovas and chotis. But other argue it came from central Mexico since they had accordions early as well. I think the former is more likely due to the fact norteño and tejano music are distinct from what became popular in central Mexico.
I believe they meant immigrants, high class folks from Europe who moved over to Mexico
The germans were the ones keeping it trendy