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Chingo Bling

 
Artist: Chingo Bling

Similar Artists:

5th Ward Weebie, Baby Bash, Don Dinero, Pitbull, Max Minelli
  • Active: 2000s
  • Genres: Rap
  • Instrument: Producer
  • Representative Albums: "The Tamale Kingpin", "4 President", "They All Want Him But Who Can Afford Him

Biography

By selling mixtapes and CDs straight out the trunk of his car, Houston rapper Pedro Herrera III rose to prominence in the Southwest and among Latin rap fans doubling as the Mexican/Chicano self-parodying alter ego Chingo Bling. Donning the stereotypical getup of a vaquero (Latino farmhand) -- cowboy ostrich boots and oversized belt buckles -- Chingo personifies his fun-filled, Spanglish lyrics and rap music jokes, sporting aliases like the Ghetto Vaquero and the Tamale Kingpin. Herrera's family emigrated from Valle Hermoso, Tamaulipas, Mexico, to Houston, TX, where Herrera was born. To keep him away from the city's turbulent city life, his parents sent him away to the prestigious Peddie School, a private boarding school in New Jersey, on a scholarship. He returned to Texas to attend Trinity University in San Antonio, majoring in marketing and business administration. While at Trinity, he first concocted the Chingo Bling persona as part of an on-air routine for his disc jockey gig at the KRTU student radio station.

Herrera first began selling Chingo mixtapes around 2001 at local stores, flea markets, and wherever else in Texas he could find an audience. His big break came when he seized the opportunity to appear on Power 106's Pocos Pero Locos show in Los Angeles. The syndicated show got his music played throughout the Southwest on Chicano rap forums. Self-released on his own Big Chile Enterprises label, his first album, 2004's The Tamale Kingpin, was heavily anticipated, but by the release of his second album, the following year's 4 President, Chingo had become a regional star. His record sales did not measure up to breakthrough artists on major labels, but his comedic appeal garnered widespread attention, including features on MTV and Telemundo as well as in several hip-hop publications. Some of the attention, however, came from critics who thought of him as just a Latino version of a black Sambo, a racist caricature of Mexican/Chicano culture. And it didn't help that Herrera's Big Chile imprint was also producing products like Chingo bobblehead dolls and hot sauce. Nonetheless, the local hoopla over Chingo translated into a heated contract bidding war among major labels like Bad Boy, Universal, Capitol, and Atlantic. Asylum/Warner won out, signing Big Chile to an $80 million distribution deal in 2006.

Amidst the rising tension concerning the influx of undocumented Latino and Latina immigrants in the late 2000s, Herrera switched the title of his 2007 Asylum debut from Welcome to the Border to They Can't Deport Us All. His concerted promotional effort (which included erecting a billboard of the album title in Houston) drew out all types of backlash from national conservative pundits and local citizens alike. In addition to receiving several death threats, his father's tamale truck, brandishing the album promotional ad, was vandalized, shot at, illegally towed, and then, finally, stolen. They Can't Deport Us All debuted at 11 on the rap charts, containing features from Baby Bash, Pitbull, Paul Wall, and Mistah F.A.B. ~ Cyril Cordor, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Chingo Bling
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Chingo Bling
Birth name Pedro Herrera III
Origin Houston, Texas, United States

United States / Mexico

Genres Mexican rap, Houston hip hop, Southern rap
Occupations Rapper
Years active 2002-present
Labels Big Chile Enterprises / Asylum Records
Associated acts Stunta, Lucky Luciano, Paul Wall, Pitbull, Trae
Website Chingo Bling Official Homepage

Chingo Bling was born Pedro Herrera III. He graduated from Trinity University in San Antonio, Texas in 2002 with a BS in business administration,[1] was a member of the national business fraternity Alpha Kappa Psi, and is CEO and founder of the record label Big Chile Enterprises[2].

Contents

Label bidding war

In early 2006, Chingo Bling made headlines when he drew the attention of major record labels eager to sign him because of his unique lyrical abilities and profound swagger, including Bad Boy Latino, Thizz Latin Records, Universal Records, Asylum (owned by Warner Music Group), Capitol Records, and Atlantic Records.[3] On April 1, 2006, he made the announcement on Chicano Radio Network that he has signed a distribution deal with Asylum Records.[4] While he still maintains his independent status from the label, his $80 million distribution deal will manage to give him major financial backing for his up coming projects[2]

Controversy

Chingo Bling had been criticized for the title of his second album They Can't Deport Us All. He was interviewed on CW39 News and said his family tamale truck has been shot at, vandalized and eventually on one occasion stolen. He also stated he has been receiving extreme racist threats from many Latinos, but still does not wish to change his album's title.[5]

Chingo also alleges that he was refused the opportunity to appear at a scheduled in-store album signing at a Dallas shopping mall as a direct result of the controversy surrounding his clothing and album name.[2]. He also asserts that he is the target of numerous Conservative journalists and bloggers who criticize him because of his music and marketing concepts related to immigration.[2]

Media

He has been featured in an MTV documentary about Houston rap. He has been featured on several episodes of BET Series Beef. Chingo Bling was also featured with Nelly and Paul Wall on a remix of Nelly's "Grillz" song. He has made cameos in Chamillionaire's videos "Turn It Up" and "Ridin'". He was also featured in Pepsi's Yahoo! Houston Mic Pass with Lil' Flip, Chamillionaire, Trae, Bun B, Short Dawg, H.A.W.K, Magno and Mike D.[1] He is featured in the N.O.R.E. video "Más Maíz" along with Fat Joe, Lil Rob, Nina Sky, Lumidee, JT, LiL Fish, Big Mato & Negra of LDA.

Chingo Bling appeared in a short video entitled Chingo Bling: Fruit Picker on mun2. This video was later nominated for a Webby.[2]

Chingo Bling purchase a billboard in Houston, TX that read the statement, They Can't Deport Us ALL". This helped him receive national attention with a CNN Correspondent outraged by the posting

Discography

Albums

Year Album Chart Positions RIAA
US
200
US
R&B/Hip-Hop
US
Heatseekers Albums
US
Rap Albums
2004 The Tamale Kingpin 66 - 25
2007 They Can't Deport Us All 123 28 2 11
2009 Me Vale Madre - - - -

See also

References

  1. ^ Chingo Bling Signs With Asylum, Asylum Records press release, August 7, 2006
  2. ^ a b c d Latin Hip Hop Interview - "Chingo Bling Knocks Down Industry Borders"
  3. ^ Bolden, Janee. Chingo Bling Label Bidding War. SOHH.com. March 31, 2006. Retrieved on February 10, 2007.
  4. ^ Mears, Bill. Chingo Bling Signes Disribution Deal with Asylum. xxlmag.com. August 10, 2006. Retrieved on February 10, 2007.
  5. ^ Houston Press - "Chingo Bling: They Can't Deport Us All"

External links


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