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  2. Tejano Music Award for Female Vocalist of the Year - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tejano_Music_Award_for...

    The Tejano Music Award for Female Vocalist of the Year is an honor presented to female Tejano music recording artists. The Tejano Music Awards, first bestowed in 1981, was established to recognize the most talented performers of the genre—a subcategory of regional Mexican music, with roots in the music of early European settlers in Texas. [1]

  3. Jennifer Peña - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jennifer_Peña

    By 2000, Peña was the most prominent female Tejano singer, and had been long-dubbed "La Princesa de la Música Tejana" (the princess of Tejano music). Her most commercially- and critically-acclaimed album, while under Q's management, was 2000's Abrázame y Bésame ("hug me and kiss me"), for which Peña was billed as a solo act but still ...

  4. Selena - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selena

    She was the best-selling Latin female singer of the 1990s in the U.S. and Mexico. [284] Selena was named "Best Female Vocalist of the '80s" and "Best Female Vocalist of the '90s" at the 2010 Tejano Music Awards. [94] In 2023, Rolling Stone ranked Selena at number 89 on its list of the 200 Greatest Singers of All Time. [285]

  5. List of number-one Billboard Top Latin Albums from the 1990s

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_number-one...

    It won the Grammy Award for Best Latin Pop Album in 1995, defeating albums from singers Cristian Castro, Plácido Domingo, Juan Gabriel and Tejano music group La Mafia; [6] the latter also peaked at number one in March 1995 with their live album Éxitos En Vivo. [7]

  6. Tejano music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tejano_music

    Tejano female singers Lynda V (and the Boys) and Letty Guval are two amongst others who made their mark in Tejano Music in 1990s but little is known about them. Lynda V (and the Boys) formed her band in 1988, signed a record contract with Bob Griever and CBS Records in 1990, and two years later signed a record deal with major company Capitol EMI.

  7. 1990s in Latin music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1990s_in_Latin_music

    Tejano music suffered and its popularity waned following Selena's death, and record labels began abandoning their Tejano artists. [38] By the mid-1990s, Tejano music was replaced by Latin pop as the dominant Latin music genre in the United States, [39] while radio stations in the US switched from Tejano to Regional Mexican music. [38]

  8. Women in Latin music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_Latin_music

    Other female singers who were moderately successful during the Tejano golden age were Shelly Lares, Stefani Montiel, Mary Lee Ochoa, and Stephanie Lynn. [64] Linda Ronstadt is credited with inspiring the mariachi renaissance in the United States. At the turn of the decade, Tejano music was the fastest-growing music genre in the United States. [65]

  9. Tejano Music Awards - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tejano_Music_Awards

    This was due to the popularity of American singer Selena, who was called the "Queen of Tejano Music". [5] [6] Selena dominated the female-only awards, [7] while American singer Emilio Navaira was called the "King of Tejano music". [8] The Tejano Music Awards celebrated their "quinceañera" year in 1995 and awarded Tejano musicians in 14 ...