From a more anthropological perspective on the problem, as Irma Ruiz rightly demands, there is no doubt the existence of popular urban musical practices that lack massiveness, since they bring together local communities; of media coverage, since it is the communities themselves that self-produce their musical events, and of modernity, since traditional values prevail in them. However, most of these cases, being in urban contexts, have a latent massiveness, since such communities are multipliable; there are certain degrees of media coverage in the way musicians have received their art; and the values of tradition can be mixed with the attachment to the memory of a past modernity. Examples of these cases can be found in the musical practices of immigrant groups, in the rock recitals of the so-called "urban tribes" and in traveling musicians. If none of this happened, we would be facing manifestations of urban folklore, as in the Chilean cueca or in the practices of organ grinders in Santiago and Valparaíso
One of the most ideal summer time travel destinations in Texas, even for the chicken-hearted like me (it may be surely loved without the kamikaze jump part).
Jacobs Well is a designated Natural Area, nestled within the heart of the Texas Hill Country and domestic to trails and to the well-known swimming hole. Getting to the swimming vicinity calls for an clean and great 15-minute nature stroll from the car parking zone. Reservations are extraordinarily endorsed, make yours here.