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Todd P’s MtyMx Mexican Standoff

The chaotic, contentious, possibly dangerous, proudly defiant scene at the promoter's Monterrey festival

Fans and band members at the MtyMx festival in Monterrey attempt to remove a shuttle bus from a ditch.
Rebecca Smeyne
Fans and band members at the MtyMx festival in Monterrey attempt to remove a shuttle bus from a ditch.

At night in March, the temperature in Monterrey, Mexico, can dip below 50 degrees—cold enough that attendees at MtyMx, the three-day Mexican-American music festival organized by New York concert promoter Todd Patrick, were using stray pieces of wood to light fires on the several-acre gravel lot that made up the festival’s grounds. In front of the venue’s two side-by-side stages, 300 people or so—mostly Mexicans, punctuated by scattered, grizzled-looking refugees from Austin, Texas’s South by Southwest conference and fans who flew in from New York, Colorado, Canada, and elsewhere—gathered, encircling Baltimore spazz-core hero Dan Deacon. It was Sunday, March 21, day two of the festival; Patrick, since arriving late the night before, far later than he’d planned, had been forced to deal with everything from security issues to the depleted morale of his own staff, to say nothing of the fact that nearly half the American bands he’d booked, including many of the headliners, had dropped off the bill in the 36 hours since MtyMx began. The crowd was understandably upset. Todd P was upset, too.

“So I got a lot of text messages from booking agents and from, you know, bands’ mothers, saying, ‘Mexico, oh, it's so dangerous,’ ” Patrick said from the stage, Deacon at his side. “ ‘Mexico—oh, they hijack buses there.’ ” As he paused, a chant arose from the crowd, and Patrick picked it up: “Yes, ‘pussies,’ that’s the word. They all thought they were going to die. Now I don't know, but I'm looking around—you all seem pretty alive!” And, perched on the side of a hilltop, strung out across the grounds of a semi-abandoned drive-in movie theater overlooking the lights of the city down below, we indisputably were.

As it turns out, though, they do hijack buses in Mexico. On the Thursday and Friday preceding MtyMx, local drug traffickers had commandeered dozens of civilian vehicles, lighting them on fire and leaving them in the streets and highways around Monterrey to serve as impromptu roadblocks. On Friday, two students were killed as cartels and the Mexican Army engaged in a gunfight outside one of the city’s most wealthy private universities. At the Monterrey airport that night, as scattered ticketholders were arriving, clusters of armed soldiers greeted travelers at terminal entrances and exits. In the MtyMx-sanctioned Hotel Fundador, located in Monterrey’s Barrio Antiguo nightlife district, clerks warned travelers in Spanish about the dangers of going outside after dark. The next day, as attendees waited for shuttles between the hotel and the venue, army convoys carrying machine guns and men in ski masks could be seen, cruising warily past.

It wasn’t supposed to happen this way. When MtyMx was first announced in early February, it had all the makings of a coronation for Patrick, 34, whose steady ascendance from outer-borough raconteur to nationally known promoter always seemed destined to culminate in an undertaking this ambitious. The festival promised a bill featuring everyone from Japanese psych-rock legends Acid Mothers Temple to the L.A. punk duo No Age, curated by Patrick and his Monterrey-based partner, Yo Garage’s Ricardo Ramirez Franco: 78 bands in total, a full third of them from Mexico. Patrick and Ramirez Franco arranged two stages, concessions, beer, a tent city, hotel accommodations for those who wanted them, and a shuttle between Austin—home to SXSW, the concurrent, corporate, sponsored, promotional orgy that would serve as a tidy example of everything MtyMx wasn’t—and the venue, 350 miles to the south. “We wanted to prove that we can do something hard,” Patrick said in the run-up to the festival.

He never really got the chance. On the morning of Monday, March 15, five days before MtyMx was scheduled to begin, the State Department announced a warning for Americans traveling in Mexico after several U.S. citizens were murdered in the town of Ciudad Juárez, hundreds of miles north and west of Monterrey. That same day, Patrick announced that he would be going forward as planned: “We have concluded that the MtyMx festival need not be affected in any way by last week's statements by the U.S. consulate. The recent travel advisory is alarmist, and it fits with the normal protocol of the U.S. State Department, which has a history of advising against travel to anywhere but the most sanitized international destinations.” His written statement cited as evidence the fact that MtyMx had sold tickets “to literally hundreds of well-heeled Mexican indie rock fans from Mexico City, Guadalajara, San Miguel Allende, and dozens of other Mexican cities.”

Many of them never came, though some did. The festival began late on Saturday at the Autocinema Las Torres, a gravelly stretch of open field halfway up a hill overlooking one of Monterrey’s poorest neighborhoods, bracketed on one side by an old drive-in movie screen and a half-inhabited apartment complex, and by brush and weeds on the other. Views to the north and south were of mountains and the American chain restaurants that line the city’s roadways. San Pedro, one of Monterrey’s wealthiest districts, is about five minutes away—too far for some, according to local attendees like Maria Vidal, 29, who said that many of her neighbors had declined to attend. “This weekend’s been really difficult,” she said. “With the violence and everything that’s happening—there aren’t as many people here as there should be.” Dolce Jiménez Gámez, 22, at MtyMx as part of Franco’s Yo Garage team, said something similar: “Many people are afraid of being killed.”

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  • Podd T 05/28/2010 7:05:00 AM

    Todd P is a pretentious d-bag who learned to talk by reading pitchfork reviews. He's annoying, and ineffectual.

  • Maria! 04/01/2010 1:34:00 AM

    I am mexican, I lived my whole life in the border between coahuila and texas and then moved to monterrey to study because i hated san antonio. I lived six years here, BAD TIMING, it was. There have always been so many problems with the cartels, but they only killed each other and now they finally the got to the citizens. Sucks, because the party was just getting started. I'm just so happy that exactly THE RIGHT PEOPLE came. Not lame ass spring breakers looking to get wasted and naked, but interesting as hell gringos, so cool I even hosted a bunch in my house. I made so many friends, how the hell were we not going to get along? I loved the festival, I fell in love with so many bands, I MET THE BANDS!. Sure, there were many mistakes, we noticed, but during the festival we were having too much fun to care. Thank you Todd P. LOVE MONTERREY; MEXICO!

  • doug 03/29/2010 10:19:00 PM

    As it turns out, though, they do hijack PLANES in the US. that has never stopped bands from flying.

  • Matt 03/26/2010 1:29:00 AM

    My band bailed on me, right there on the bus, and I went anyway. Sure there were a few issues -- namely that the American-side bus situation was not well researched (the Mexican ones were fantastic by the way), and that the chaperones really needed to speak Spanish, but all in all, it was a fantastic weekend. The folks that stuck with it were the folks with positive attitudes and good vibes, so what you got was a bunch of adventurous people that were ready for anything. I would also venture to guess that many of the folks that made it there were people that had done a fair amount of traveling, and it didn't surprise me that a large chunk of people were from Australia & New Zealand. Pretty much everyone I met down there were all super great and had very little time to bitch about lack of comfort or sketchy timelines (that shit is par for the course in most places outside the U.S.) As for shows being ill-attended, that place was huge, so it's a little deceiving as far as it appearing sparse. When half the crowd made it over to Yo Garage for the late night shows, they were packed, wild and crazy. And once everyone was relaxed, enjoying gigantic cheap beers and great food for pennies, the idea of it being a failure wasn't on anyone's mind. Though it was far from smooth, I still found the whole thing to be quite an accomplishment and something the organizers and volunteers can be proud of. I never once felt afraid in Mexico, and the whole thing was a huge, pretty insane undertaking that I found pretty impressive. I have tons of respect for the bands on our bus that made it down through all the shit, without pulling any prima donna shit (thats you, Indian Jewelry & Lemonade) - those bands made the best of it and I'm pretty sure they'll tell you they were glad they went. I made tons of friends I look forward to seeing again, and fuck, why wouldn't I go down to Monterrey if they do it again next year?

  • Nick Vivid 03/25/2010 7:30:00 PM

    Same thing happened with his Iraq Music Festival. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wgxJnZhJfBQ

  • aka47 03/25/2010 2:27:00 AM

    Seemed like a cool concept and I guess a rather ambitious way to move beyond Brooklyn. But the execution was poor. Seems he's relied too much on others (mostly volunteers) doing the work rather than going down and getting his hands dirty. It's not about moms and poor timing, it's about getting the planning done right His comments about the canceled bands, while probably more of a device to life the spirits of those at the fest, makes Todd seem like an ungracious host.

  • Joly MacFie 03/24/2010 10:40:00 PM

    If Rebecca Smeyne made it all the way down there - we'd surely like to see more than one murky picture of a bus - or did they never get that bus out of the ditch?

  • CARLOS SLIM 03/24/2010 5:04:00 PM

    mexico is a dump---but i'm the richest mexican, richest person period, in the world, so fuck all you gringos!

 

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