MAIA MCDONALD

MAIA MCDONALD ✿

How Chicago’s All-Women Mariachi Group Is Embracing Their Roots — And Bucking Tradition

By Maia McDonald Aug. 22, 2023 | Borderless Magazine

Despite lukewarm feelings about the genre as a child, Mariachi Sirenas cofounder Ibet Herrera helped form Chicago’s first all-women mariachi band. The group has fostered a sisterhood of talented musicians while honoring their roots.


Following a raucous feet-stomping performance at the annual Fiesta Del Sol in Chicago’s Pilsen neighborhood, Mariachi Sirenas are greeted by a gaggle of excited festivalgoers backstage. 
The all-women mariachi band had just wrapped up an hour-long set of well-known mariachi classics like “Las Ciudades,” “Cielito Lindo Huasteco,” and “La Sirenita Baila (Cumbia Popurri)” on a sunny July afternoon. Attendees swayed to the lilting voices and fast-paced tempos of the violins, trumpets and guitars — the group’s signature sound since it formed in 2017.
Even with a quinceañera after their festival set, several band members made time to speak with eager fans who praised their performance and feminine take on traditional mariachi songs.
Mariachi Sirenas has become a source of community, family and culture for the Sirenas themselves and their fans, who feel pride when seeing them perform. 
“My goodness, they were amazing,” attendee Maria Waré gushed. “I just wanted to get up there and do some background with them.”
The Chicago band’s popularity has surged in recent years. And the performance at Fiesta del Sol, a festival organized by Pilsen Neighbors Community Council that celebrates Latino culture, only fueled more interest. Ibet Herrera, the band’s cofounder, said the set prompted several calls from people interested in booking the band for private events. 
It is welcome news for the band, especially with these gigs serving as many members’ full-time jobs. 
Over the past six years, the all-women mariachi band has worked tirelessly to defy stereotypes while honoring their Mexican roots. The band has dedicated hours rehearsing to perfect their public performances. They have cultivated a following and are leaving a mark on Chicago’s mariachi community.
Herrera believes they have put in the work to not just be known as “Chicago’s all-women mariachi group,” but a talented mariachi group in their own right.
“It’s been very positive,” Herrera said. “Everyone has been so supportive and so loving, and they’ve really taken us under their wing.”

The seeds of Chicago’s only genre-defying mariachi band

Herrera started Mariachi Sirenas with fellow mariachi performer Eréndira Izguerra, who she met at a performance in 2017. The two had long searched for an all-women mariachi group in the Chicago area. When neither could find one, they teamed up to start their own group later that year.
Inspired by their dulcet tones and melodic harmonies akin to mermaids and sirens, the women named the band “Mariachi Sirenas.” They wanted to bring a “feminine visual to mariachi, [something] that is such a very masculine genre,” Herrera said. Izguerra later moved to Mexico in 2020 and Herrera has since lead the Mariachi Sirenas on her own. 
Herrera now embraces mariachi music, but that wasn’t always the case. 
“I [had] this love and hate with my culture,” Herrera said. “Being first generation, [from] immigrant parents, you kind of want to be like everybody else and not have to do the adult thing. So, being Mexican, I knew I was Mexican, but I was kind of ashamed of it. I was embarrassed of it, and mariachi is very Mexican. So I just didn’t like it.”
Herrera still remembers one Father’s Day when her mother booked a mariachi to perform for her father. Much to Herrera’s chagrin, her mother — a lover of the genre — would later hire one of the band’s performers to give Herrera mariachi lessons. 
She still looks fondly at that first summer being carpooled by her mother and taking mariachi lessons with her brother and cousins. 
“I already had played the violin in orchestra in school,” Herrera said. “So she says, ‘You want to do it,’ and I’m like, ‘No,’ and she’s like, ‘Well, we’re gonna do it anyway,’ and she got my cousins to do it, too. Then, every day that summer, we were doing mariachi lessons, and then through mariachi, I learned to love my culture again.”

MAIA MCDONALD

MAIA MCDONALD ✿