Which of course, is Panchito's favourite dance. ...You know, they put where in Brazil Joe is from in his last name, but they never say where in Mexico Panchito is from.
Born and raised In Chicago. I’m very lucky that my parents are from Mexico. Although my mom is from Puebla and my dad is from Zacatecas. They love this dance.
"Jarabe Pateño", del compositor Jonás Yeverino Cárdenas, originario de General Cepeda, Coahuila. Yeverino recopiló sones antiquísimos de la región coahuilense y compuso esta melodía que está considerada como la más emblemática de Coahuila de Zaragoza.
this is Jarabe Pateno which is a dance from Michoacan where my mom is from . my mom is from a small Village near La Piedad Michoacan called El Rodeo . and the older ladies in the Village still kinda dress like the ladys on this video with the Rebosos on there heads and long Colorful dresses .
The dresses correspond to Michoacán, but the music corresponds to Coahuila, a Northern state, neighoburing Texas. "Jarabe Pateño" was composed in honor of a small town named General Cepeda, which used to be named "Hacienda de Patos". Unfortunately, Disney (as usual in products coming from Hollywood) tried to simplify Mexico's customs and folklore and mixed together two very different regions as if they were the same.
The late 40's were a bit of a simpler time where people didn't really notice (or care) for the differences. They were still facinating movies regardless. Especially these ones showing american kids other cultures outside of their own. Haha
@@atteranenforcer5263 I agree. There may be flaws in the details, but this movie is pretty eye opening when it comes down to traditions and cultures outside America
bago510 De hecho, este baile es originario de Coahuila, de la ciudad de General Cepeda, sin embargo su difución se ha extendido a todo México y el mundo. Un saludo =)
@@MeiGoat Response to an old comment alert, lol, but the “ay Jalisco no te raje!” that Panchito sings in the song is apparently a phrase that seems to pop up in several Mexican songs. It’s a cheer of sorts, basically translating to “don’t give up, Jalisco!”
this movie was way ahead of its time, they mixed real life color with animation in 1944, and it looks and feels like a modern day movie, truly amazing
I agree with Panchito, this is by far the best of all mexican dances shown in this movie.
I'd trip over my own feet trying to perform a lovely dance like this.
Born and raised In Chicago. I’m very lucky that my parents are from Mexico. Although my mom is from Puebla and my dad is from Zacatecas. They love this dance.
I love how not even WW2 is stopping the Mexicans having fun. Shows that even in war life is short.
Wow, México tiene muchos differentes tipos de bailes! (I hope I wrote that right)
Yes you did :)
@@MarcoArielMavilTorres Panchito Pistoles: This is my favorite dance, Jarabe Pateño. Which of course, this is Panchito's favorite dance.
En realidad se escribe "muchos tpios de baile diferentes".
"Jarabe Pateño", del compositor Jonás Yeverino Cárdenas, originario de General Cepeda, Coahuila. Yeverino recopiló sones antiquísimos de la región coahuilense y compuso esta melodía que está considerada como la más emblemática de Coahuila de Zaragoza.
this is Jarabe Pateno which is a dance from Michoacan where my mom is from . my mom is from a small Village near La Piedad Michoacan called El Rodeo . and the older ladies in the Village still kinda dress like the ladys on this video with the Rebosos on there heads and long Colorful dresses .
A Beautiful place and Beautiful ladies
@@zurielrodriguezmontero1086 Panchito Pistoles: This is my favorite dance, Jarabe Pateño. Which of course, this is Panchito's favorite dance.
Out of curiosity, is it an intentional pun to coincide with "pato"?
That's really interesting!
Jarabe pateño is from General Cepeda, coahuila.
Honestly, this dance looks like fun! I'm really appreciating this movie!
The dresses correspond to Michoacán, but the music corresponds to Coahuila, a Northern state, neighoburing Texas. "Jarabe Pateño" was composed in honor of a small town named General Cepeda, which used to be named "Hacienda de Patos". Unfortunately, Disney (as usual in products coming from Hollywood) tried to simplify Mexico's customs and folklore and mixed together two very different regions as if they were the same.
The late 40's were a bit of a simpler time where people didn't really notice (or care) for the differences. They were still facinating movies regardless. Especially these ones showing american kids other cultures outside of their own. Haha
@@atteranenforcer5263 I agree. There may be flaws in the details, but this movie is pretty eye opening when it comes down to traditions and cultures outside America
@@emilyannthevioletghost715 I remember being fascinated by this movie when I was young.
@@atteranenforcer5263 I agree. :-)
And the composer's family continues to fight for the corresponding royalties from Disney for having used the music without crediting the author
my grandparents are in this😇
I wish this movie gets released on Disney Blu-ray 3D!
Well, there's Disney +. The Three Caballeros is on there
bago510 De hecho, este baile es originario de Coahuila, de la ciudad de General Cepeda, sin embargo su difución se ha extendido a todo México y el mundo. Un saludo =)
what
C'est un beau film
Jarabe Pateño - state of Coahuila
Outfit - state of Michoacán
Disney.....do your research
This was from 1944. I'm not sure if they were too knowledgeable about the differences then
Who's to say Michoacanos don't do the Jarabe Pateño?
-Just kidding-
MEXICAN FOREVER
What you said is what it means in Spanish?
Harrison Stoller Mexicana para siempre
I used to dance this as a kid.
El Jarabe Pateño es de la autoría de don Jonás Yeverino, y se llama así en honor de Gral. Cepeda que antiguamente se llamaba Hacienda de Patos.
I mean it looks impossible, but it also looks like fun.
Me gusta méxico
I wonder if this book is what the magical atlas in the new show is based on
It's possible. I've seen all thirteen episodes
!! OH I didn't think of that, maybe
de mí querido estado de coahuila
I truly wish I could do this dance. It looks like fun
If this came out in 2014, we wouldn't be so eager to build a wall...
Times have changed thanks to drug cartels and sex trafficking.
Donald's doing a irish jig
Is it just me or does the song remind me of mickey christmas carol in the past.
Love the tune
❤🙏👏👏👏🙏🙏
This is one of the few ways to get you back to kids
🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽
I would dance to that all night.
I have found the way
Sweet!
2009: no
2008 - 2019: you get the idea
2020: yes
Awesome
FEBRERO 15 2019.
can you dance that in chihuahua and ciudad juárez
Are you sure about that??
It’s my favorite dance too. Is it in Patzcuaro?
"Jarabe ? NOOOOO !!"
panchito is dressed like a charro from guadalajara. specifically jalisco
Oh my gosh thank you, I was trying to figure out who or what Jalisco was since he sings about it in the caballeros song
@@MeiGoat Panchito Pistoles: This is my favorite dance, Jarabe Pateño. Which of course, this is Panchito's favorite dance.
@@MeiGoat Response to an old comment alert, lol, but the “ay Jalisco no te raje!” that Panchito sings in the song is apparently a phrase that seems to pop up in several Mexican songs. It’s a cheer of sorts, basically translating to “don’t give up, Jalisco!”
@@PixarShark Old comment but appreciated nonetheless thank you
Put the beach
Scene please
What is that mean
What's the jarabe pateño?
Do Mexican women cover their hair traditionally?
No, just for some folkloric dances, but it is not a tradition
What's the song playing around the 30 second mark?
jarabe pateño?
@@ufinii Panchito Pistoles: This is my favorite dance, Jarabe Pateño. Which of course, this is Panchito's favorite dance.
Ha Ha lol
De patzcuaro michoacan.
I am not used to the English one😳
El jarabe tapatío