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Los Tigres del Norte

 
Artist: Los Tigres del Norte
Los Tigres del Norte

Group Members:

Lupe Olivo, Hernán Hernández, Jorge Hernández, Oscar Lara, Luis Hernández, Eduardo Hernández, Raúl Hernández

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Followers:

Performed Songs By:

Enrique Valencia, Jorge "Guiro" Borrego, Jessie Armenta, Teodoro Bello, Adolfo Salas, Angel "Tucán" González, Paulino Vargas, Homero Vela, Enrique Franco, Pepe Cabrera
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  • Genres: Latin
  • Representative Albums: "Mi Buena Suerte," "16 Super Exitos," "Serie de Coleccion"
  • Representative Songs: "La Banda del Carro Rojo," "La Puerta Negra," "La Camioneta Gris"

Biography

No norteño act is more renowned than Los Tigres del Norte, a group of Mexican-American brothers based in California who began their recording career in the early '70s and enjoyed widespread acclaim over the following decades, recording regularly for Fonovisa Records from the 1980s onward. The group is centered on lead vocalist and accordionist Jorge Hernández (the oldest of 11 children), who is joined in Los Tigres by his brothers Hernán (bass, vocals), Eduardo (accordion, saxophone, bass, vocals), and Luis (guitar, vocals), as well as his cousin Oscar Lara (drums). In 1968 they left Mexico for California (along with brother Raúl Hernández, who would leave the group in the 1990s for a solo career), in search of better means of supporting their family following an injury that prevented their father, D. Eduardo Hernández, from ranching any longer. Their hometown is Rosa Morada, which is located in the municipality of Mocorito in the western state of Sinaloa. Their moniker arose when an immigration official called the boys "little tigers" (a nickname for kids) as they crossed the border, eventually bound for San Jose, which became their longtime residence.

During the early '70s, Los Tigres became the first act signed to Fama Records. Founded by Art Walker, Fama grew to become the leading Spanish-language record label on the West Coast. Walker, a local impresario, first heard the group on a live radio presentation recorded at the local Parque de las Flores on Keyes Street in San Jose, and impressed with what he heard, he decided to make them the foundation of Fama. With his guidance, Los Tigres adopted an electric style, trading in their traditional acoustic sound for one incorporating bass, drums, and electric guitar. The group also adopted a modern approach to songwriting, emphasizing contemporary social themes common to Mexican-Americans.

Their breakthrough hit, "Contrabando y Traición" (1972), is emblematic. Like most of the group's songs, "Contrabando y Traición" is a corrido, which is an age-old style of narrative song common to the mestizo cultural area of North America, including the northern states of Mexico as well as the southwestern ones of the United States. Traditionally, corridos feature a salutation or prologue; a story, often a legend or ballad of a hero or criminal native to northern Mexico; and in conclusion, a moral or lesson. However, "Contrabando y Traición" is a thoroughly modern corrido, as it features a pair of lovers who traffic marijuana across the border in the tires of a car.

The song became a sizable hit in southern California and set the course for the long, continuing success of Los Tigres, who went on to write a multitude of notable contemporary corridos about the drug trade (i.e., narcocorridos) and immigration. Corridos Prohibidos (1989), in particular, showcases the former, while "Jaula de Oro," one of their most well-known and frequently compiled songs, is an example of the latter. The song, whose title translates to Golden Cage, details the plight of an undocumented worker in the United States: he swam across the border ten years prior yet still doesn't have his papers; his wife and kids have long since forgotten about Mexico, while he longs to return yet cannot; he asks his son if he would like to go back to Mexico, and his son responds, in English, "What are you talking about, Dad? I don't want to go back to Mexico -- no way, Dad!"; and transcribed, the chorus laments, "What good is money/If I'm like a prisoner/Inside this big nation?/When I remember I cry/Although the jail may be made of gold/It's still a prison."

In the 1980s, Los Tigres moved to Fonovisa Records and furthered their success. Beginning with Jaula de Oro (1984), the group would regularly top the regional Mexican album chart stateside, and this success was acknowledged in 1987 when they won the initial Grammy Award for Best Mexican-American Performance, for Gracias America...Sin Fronteras (1986). They subsequently would be nominated over a dozen times, and that's not even counting the Latin Grammys. Los Tigres were later honored with El Mas Grande Homenaje a Los Tigres del Norte (2001), a tribute album featuring many of the biggest names in Mexican pop/rock, such as Julieta Venegas and Molotov. Furthermore, beginning in 2003 Fonovisa began to compile a series of greatest-hits compilations titled Herencia Musical.

Throughout their long and storied career, Los Tigres, also known as Los Idolos del Pueblo and Los Jefes de Jefes, maintained a respectable image, never glamorizing the drug trade nor any other criminal activity. They refused to be photographed with so much as a gun in sight. This air of respectability helped them expand their audience demographically as well as internationally. By the early 2000s, Los Tigres had begun touring globally and their shows often reflected the diversity of their fan base. Amid all of this activity they continued releasing albums on an annual basis, and they began to branch out into cinema as well, with DVD videos becoming a regular addition to their CDs. In total, they've released over 50 albums, recorded over 500 songs, and appeared in over a dozen films. In 2006, Fonovisa reissued some of these films as CD/DVDs, complementing the films -- cine de frontera classics such as La Banda del Carro Rojo and La Muerte del Soplon -- with thematic compilations of Los Tigres favorites. ~ Jason Birchmeier, All Music Guide
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Discography: Los Tigres del Norte
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Tigres del Norte: El Chequ

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Plaza Garibaldi

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Reina del Sur

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Herencia Musical: 20 Norteñas Famosas [CD/DVD]

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Herencia Musical: 20 Norteñas Famosas

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Tu Noche Con Tigres del Norte

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Cumbias y Algo Mas [CD & DVD]

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Cumbias y Algo Mas

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Muerte del Soplon [CD/DVD]

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Karaoke Tigres del Norte

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Herencia Musical: 20 Boleros Romanticos

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Herencia Musical: 20 Boleros Romanticos [CD/DVD]

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Triunfo Solido

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Pacto de Sangre

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Pacto de Sangre [CD & DVD]

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Directo al Corazon

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Directo al Corazon [CD & DVD]

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Internacionales Panteras de Nuevo León

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Raices

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Herencia de Familia

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Grandes Nortenas de los Idolos del Pueblo: Leyenda y Tradicion

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Herencia Musical: 20 Corridos Inolvidables

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Herencia Musical: 20 Corridos Inolvidables [CD/DVD]

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16 Grandes Exitos

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Carrera Contra La Muerte

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Internacionalmente Norteños

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Pueblo Querido

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Dia a la Vez

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16 Zarpasos

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Mas Zarpasos

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25 Joyas

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Asi Como Tu

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Uniendo Fronteras

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20 Corridos Prohibidos

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Mas Pedidas [CD & DVD]

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Mas Pedidas

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Siguen los Zarpazos

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Banda del Carro Rojo [CD/DVD]

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Tan Bonita

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Ti Madrecita

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Dos Plebes

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Historias Que Contar

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Historias Que Contar [CD/DVD]

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Detalles y Emociones

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Vivan Lo

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Contraba

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De Paisano A Paisano

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Corridos

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Contrabando, Tración Y Robo

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Amores...Que Van Y Vienen

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Amores...Que Van Y Vienen

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30 Norteñas de Oro

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Jefe de Jefes

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Unidos Para Siempre

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16 Kilates Musicales

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Ejemplo

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Garra de...

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Serie de Coleccion

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Noche con los Tigres del Norte

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24 Exitos Serie De Collecion

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Incansables

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De Pelicula

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A Ti Madrecita

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Para Adoloridos

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Para Adoloridos

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Mi Buena Suerte

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Corridos Prohibidos

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16 Super Exitos

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16 Super Exitos

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Idolos Del Pueblo

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Gracias America...Sin Fronteras

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Jaula de Oro

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Tahur

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Tahur

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Wikipedia: Los Tigres del Norte
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Los Tigres Del Norte Frontman Jorge

Los Tigres del Norte (The Tigers of the North in English) are a Grammy and Latin Grammy winning norteño-band ensemble, from Rosa Morada, Sinaloa, Mexico. The group was started by Jorge Hernández, his brothers, and his cousins. They began recording after moving to San José, California in the late 1960s, when all the members were still in their teens.[citation needed] They were sponsored by a local record company, Discos Fama, owned by an Englishman named Art Walker, who took them under his wing and helped them find jobs and material, as well as recording all of their early albums.[citation needed]

Contents

History

The Tigres were at first only locally popular, but took off after Jorge and Art Walker heard a Los Angeles mariachi singer perform a song in the early 1970s about a couple of drug runners, Emilio Varela and Camelia la Texana. There had been occasional ballads (corridos, in Mexican terminology) about the cross-border drug trade ever since Prohibition in the 1920s, but never a song as cinematic as this, featuring a woman smuggler who shoots the man and takes off with the money. After getting permission to record this song, Los Tigres del Norte released "Contrabando y Traición" ("Contraband and Betrayal") in 1974[1]. The song quickly hit on both sides of the border, inspired a series of movies, and kicked off one of the most remarkable careers in Spanish-language pop music.

In Norteño/conjunto form (a style featuring accordion that originated along the Texas border region), Los Tigres del Norte have been able to portray "real life" in a manner that strikes a chord with people across the Americas. Many of their most popular songs consist of tales or corridos about life, love, and the struggle to survive in an imperfect world. They regularly touch on the subject of narcotics and illegal immigration, but they have also shared stories of love and betrayal between a man and a woman. Together, the band and its public has turned norteño music into an international genre. The band has modernized the music, infusing it with bolero, cumbia, rock rhythms, waltzes, as well as sound effects of machine guns and sirens integrated with the music.

The band has won five Latin Grammy Awards and sold 32 million records. [2].

The band has performed before the United States Armed Forces in Japan and South Korea[3].

Members

Former members

  • Raúl Hernández: Bajo Sexto, vocals
  • Guadalupe Olivo: Saxophone and Accordion
  • Freddy Hernandez: Percussions(Deceased)

Discography

This list excludes many "greatest hits" compilations.

  • Juana La Traicionera/Por el Amor a Mis Hijos (1968)
  • Sufro Porque te Quiero/La Cochicuina (1969)
  • Mi Caballo Ensilado (Single) (1970)
  • Si,Si,Si/Chayo Chaires (1971)
  • El Cheque (1972)
  • No Llorare (Single) (1973)
  • Contrabando Y Traición (1974)
  • La Banda Del Carro Rojo (1975)
  • La Tumba Del Mojado Internacionalmente Nortenos (1976)
  • Pueblo Querido (1976)
  • Vivan Los Mojados (1977)
  • Numero Ocho (1978)
  • Hermosa Luna (Single)(1979)
  • El Tahúr (1979)
  • En La Plaza Garibaldi (1980)
  • Un Dia A La Vez (1981)
  • Padre Nuestro - Éxitos Para Siempre (1983)
  • Carrera Contra La Muerte (1982)
  • Adolfo Mi Compadre (Single) ( 1984)
  • Jaula De Oro (1985)
  • A Ti Madrecita (1985)
  • El Otro México (1986)
  • Gracias América—Sin Fronteras (1987)
  • Ídolos Del Pueblo (1988)
  • Corridos Prohibidos (1989)
  • Triunfo Sólido - Mi Buena Suerte (1989)
  • Para Adoloridos (1990)
  • Incansables! (1991)
  • Con Sentimiento Y Sabor - Tan Bonita (1992)
  • Una Noche Con Los Tigres Del Norte (1992)
  • La Garra De (1993)
  • Los Dos Plebes (1994)
  • El Ejemplo (1995)
  • Unidos Para Siempre (1996)
  • Jefe de Jefes (1997)
  • Así Como Tú (1997)
  • Herencia De Familia (1999)
  • De Paisano A Paisano (2000)
  • Uniendo Fronteras (2001)
  • La Reina del Sur (2002)
  • Pacto de Sangre (2004)
  • Directo al Corazón (2005)
  • Historias que Contar (2006)
  • Detalles y Emociones (2007)
  • Raíces (album) (2008)
  • Tu Noche con Los Tigres del Norte (2008)
  • La Granja (2009)

References

  1. ^ Biography at Univision.com
  2. ^ article in Washington Post, February 18, 2007
  3. ^ Official site

External links


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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Los Tigres del Norte" Read more

 

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