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José Roberto Pulido (born March 1, 1950), known as Roberto "El Primo" Pulido, is an American musician whose career spans five decades.Pulido has been recognized as a Tejano music pioneer for his introduction of the accordion and saxophone into his music which "helped bridged the traditional conjunto and the modern Tejano camps" in the mid-1970s. [1]
José Roberto Pulido Jr. (born April 25, 1971), known professionally as Bobby Pulido, is an American singer, songwriter, guitarist, and actor.He is acclaimed for pioneering the dissemination of Tejano music to a youthful audience, subsequently ascending as a teen idol and becoming one of the most influential Tejano recording artists among Mexican-American teenagers.
Bobby Pulido: Most Promising Band: Won Bobby Pulido and Roberto Pulido: Vocal Duo of the Year: Nominated 1998: Bobby Pulido: Male Vocalist of the Year: Won Bobby Pulido: Male Entertainer of the Year: Won Llegaste A Me Vida: Album of the Year – Group: Won Bobby Pulido: Crossover of the Year: Won Bobby Pulido: Music Video of the Year: Won 1999 ...
The Night of the Machetes (La noche de los machetes) was the name given to the massacre that happened on May 8, 1913, in San Fernando de Atabapo, Venezuela, where the assassination of the governor of Amazonas Roberto Pulido, his wife and children, in addition to the massacre of dozens or even hundreds of people, as well as the assault on the Government House of the Amazonas Federal Territory ...
The award was first presented to Roberto Pulido, who introduced country music and ballads to the traditional polka and ranchera music of Tejano. [9] Beginning in 1982, Little Joe Hernandez dominated the award for three consecutive years until La Mafia's Oscar Gonzalez won for two consecutive years in 1985.
Prior to the establishment of the Lifetime Achievement Award in 1999, the Tejano Music Awards gave out "Special (Lifetime) Achievement" recognitions These honors were presented sporadically at the annual Tejano Music Awards and, by the late 1990s, at the Tejano Roots Hall of Fame ceremony preceding the awards show.
From April 2009 to December 2012, if you bought shares in companies when William S. Thompson, Jr. joined the board, and sold them when he left, you would have a 22.1 percent return on your investment, compared to a 67.8 percent return from the S&P 500.
Emilio H. Navaira III was born on August 23, 1962, in San Antonio, Texas, to Mexican-American parents, Emilio Navaira, Jr. and Maria Hernandez. [2] Growing up on the south side of San Antonio, Navaira found each influence in not only Tejano legends such as Little Joe y la Familia, but also Lone Star country music heroes such as Willie Nelson, Bob Wills, and George Strait.