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Corridos Sin Fronteras – Ballads Without Borders – This bilingual web site teaches the history of Mexico through corridos. The Mexican corrido A short overview with archive photos, audio samples and translations (also in Spanish.) Mexico: Trouble in Culiacán, Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting
The "Corridos Sin Fronteras" exhibition represents the history and celebrates the diversity of Mexican American ballads . [4] Around the same time, she assisted with the Arhoolie Foundation’s Strachwitz Frontera Collection project at the Chicano Studies Research Center (CSRC) at UCLA. The Frontera Collection was sponsored by Los Tigres Del ...
In May, for the first time ever, two songs from the Mexican Regional genre made their way into the Billboard Hot 100 Top Five: Grupo Frontera's collaboration with Bad Bunny, titled "Un Porciento ...
Los Mejores Corridos Vol.1 (Machete, 2007) Los Mejores Corridos Vol.2 (Machete, 2007) Grandes Exitos Originales (Machete, 2008) Dejame Vacio (Fonovisa Records, 2008) Cargamento Del Diablo (2009) Narco Edicion (2009) Serie Diamante: 30 Super Exitos (2009) El Enemigo Publico (2010) Sin Fronteras (Universal Latin Music Entertainment 2012)
Peso Pluma isn’t letting an injury slow him down. The Mexican superstar, who is leading a new wave of corridos artists on both sides of the Mexico-U.S. border, suffered a foot fracture during ...
Los Tigres del Norte (English: The Tigers of the North) are a norteño band from San Jose, California. [1] [2] [3] Originally founded in the small town Rosa Morada in the municipality of Mocorito, [1] Sinaloa, Mexico, with sales of 32 million albums, [4] the band is one of the most recognized acts in regional Mexican music, due to their long history and their successes within the Mexican ...
Los Cadetes de Linares was a Mexican norteño band famous for their corridos, traditional ballad-style songs about social causes, criminals or heroes in the northern parts of Mexico. They appeared in various classic Mexican films and made many appearances on nationally syndicated programs in Mexico and the United States.
According to its author, Ángel González, the story of the song is fictional although it does incorporate the real names of people involved in drug trafficking. [3] The story follows a drug trafficking romantic couple - Emilio Varela and Camelia la Texana – who transport several kilos of marijuana hidden in their car's tires from Tijuana, Mexico to Los Angeles, United States.