Category: Los Lobos

Kris Kristofferson tops 50th anniversary UFW concert tour

Kris Kristofferson tops the bill for six concerts saluting 50th anniversary of the United Farm Workers
Kris Kristofferson will headline half a dozen concerts across California in June to raise money and awareness for the United Farm Workers in recognition of the union’s 50th anniversary this year.

The singer and songwriter will be joined by a variety of support acts in different cities, including Los Lobos, Nydia Rojas, Mariachi Los Camperos de Nati Cano, Los Texmaniacs featuring Mingo Saldivar, and  Mariachi Divas, all of whom are donating their services to benefit the UFW.

The week-long tour opens June 15 at the Spreckels Theatre in San Diego, where Kristofferson will be joined by Mariachi Divas, and continues with stops June 16 in Fresno (Rojas with Trio Ellas), June 16 in Stockton (support act to be arranged), June 19 in Bakersfield (Los Lobos), June 21 in Oxnard (Mariachi Los Camperos de Nati Cano) and June 22 in San Jose (Los Texmaniacs).

“It’s an honor for me to share my talent with an organization such as the UFW and its cause of advancing the lives of thousands of workers that put food on all of our tables,” Kristofferson said in a statement.  “Joining forces with renowned Latino performers through these special performances offers fans great music with a great cause.”

Other activities will be part of the UFW’s 50th anniversary convention being held Thursday through Sunday in Bakersfield. Details on the UFW’s website.

Live review: Kris Kristofferson at Disney Hall

Kris Kristofferson: Pop and country's semi-tough veteran

Exclusive video: Los Lobos' watershed 1992 'Kiko' album returns

-- Randy Lewis

Photo: Kris Kristofferson. Credit: Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times.

Exclusive video: Los Lobos' watershed 1992 'Kiko' album returns

      
Los Lobos is revisiting its watershed 1992 album “Kiko” in a 20th anniversary reissue, adding to the original studio album with previously unreleased early and alternate takes of several songs. Simultaneously, a document of the band’s 2006 performance of “Kiko” in its entirety will be released separately on CD, DVD and Blu-ray, with both “Kiko” projects coming Aug. 21.

“Kiko” was hailed in 1992 as a new artistic pinnacle for the widely lauded East L.A. group and appeared on numerous critics’ yearly Top 10 lists. It was the No. 1 choice in The Times’ consensus Top 10 among its staff writers and regular contributors, and made the Top 10 of Village Voice magazine’s annual poll of some 300 pop music critics.

“ ‘Kiko’ is the band's masterpiece -- a startling leap forward in sonic reach and depth of vision,” Mike Boehm wrote in reviewing the album for The Times two decades ago. “ ‘Kiko’ is a long, troubled dream of an album that holds the temporal and the spiritual in a single gaze: It shows us a suffering humanity an angel's breath removed from an overarching realm of spirits, magic and hallucination.”

“Kiko Live” has never been released or broadcast, and includes interviews with the band members and others about the making of the album. In 2006, Los Lobos did a series of live performances focusing on it in its entirety. Above is exclusive video of the group's performance of "Kiko and the Lavendar Moon."

The CD also includes three tracks the band recorded live at Capitol Records in Hollywood for a “Hollywood House Party with Los Lobos” special that aired in 1992 on National Public Radio. The album reissue and the “Kiko Live” DVD/Blu-ray are being released by the Shout! Factory reissue specialty label.

Instead of “segregating our influences, treating them parochially,” as band member Steve Berlin described the band’s approach before “Kiko,” for that album “whatever our unconscious minds’ response was to the stimuli, that was what we wanted. We let our imagination take over and didn’t try to control it.”

The band is continuing on a tour that included the first Los Lobos Cinco de Mayo Festival at the Greek Theatre, at which the group headlined a bill that included Mariachi El Bronx and X and such guests appearing with Los Lobos as Neko Case, Alejandro Escovedo, Flaco Jimenez, and Dave and Phil Alvin.

RELATED:

Los Lobos songbook drives 'Evangeline, the Queen of Make-Believe'

Los Lobos discovers you can go home again

Los Lobos' Long, Troubled Dream: 'Kiko'

-- Randy Lewis

Los Lobos' first Cinco de Mayo Festival coming to Greek Theatre

Los Lobos launch their first Cinco De Mayo Festival at the Greek Theatre
Los Lobos’ performances over the years at the Greek Theatre have always generated a familial sense of community, so the announcement this week of the inaugural Los Lobos Cinco de Mayo Festival at the amphitheater seems only to formalize a recurring gig.

Or maybe not.

“I would definitely put ‘formal’ in quotation marks,” Louie Perez, founding guitarist, percussionist and one of the band’s songwriters, told Pop & Hiss with a laugh. “Nothing is very formal when it comes to us.”

The festival, which actually will take place May 5, will find the venerable East L.A. band joined by X, Mariachi El Bronx, Neko Case, Alejandro Escovedo and likely more names for the afternoon and evening affair. Performances are expected to branch out from the Greek’s main stage to a smaller second stage at a location on the grounds that Perez said is still being worked out.

“We’ve been talking about doing something like this for a long time,” Perez said. “But being a working band whose individual members are always doing stuff … there’s very little time to sit down and do it ourselves. We got real close to putting something together for last fall, but like everything else, stuff started falling through the cracks and that didn’t happen.

Continue reading »

'They needed some Mexicans in there': Pop & Hiss premieres the Los Lobos theme to 'Rango'

RANGO_6_

By the time Los Lobos were brought in to contribute music to "Rango," band principal David Hidalgo estimates that there were already somewhere between 12 and 20 takes at the theme to Gore Verbinski's spaghetti western-like animated feature. It was composer Hans Zimmer, said Hidalgo, who admitted defeat at trying to craft authentic mariachi music. 

"They could do it on their own, but it sounded funny," Hidalgo told Pop & Hiss. "It didn’t sound authentic. So they needed some Mexicans in there. That doesn’t sound kosher and it doesn’t sound right to say it that way, but in a way it is. You need someone who knows this music, someone to play it properly and get the real effect. That’s why they called us in."

Hidalgo hasn't seen how the band's music is used in the film -- a couple of storyboards and some rough scenes were all the band has been shown -- but the act's "Rango" theme will no doubt play a pivotal role, and act as an anchor to the soundtrack. Paramount Pictures' "Rango," about a Johnny Depp-voiced chameleon having an identity crisis, and who suddenly finds himself in a desert town with all the action of the Wild West, is the first animated feature from "Pirates of the Caribbean" director Verbinski.

"Rango" the film will be unveiled to the public on March 4, and "Rango" the song makes its debut below. Local label Anti- will release the soundtrack digitally on March 1, with a CD version available in stores on March 15.

Los Lobos - Rango Theme Song by antirecords

Los Lobos' "Rango" references Ennio Morricone and "Rawhide" in sound but is a 3 1/2-minute tale that envisions the once scrappy and hapless Rango as something of an American myth. Shown images of the desert-worn Rango, Hidalgo said he immediately went to a mariachi theme, although he noted Los Lobos cut multiple takes, including one with more of a surf-rock feel. 

"You see the film, and you see he’s kind of scrungy and old," said Hidalgo. "He’s worn out, older, lives in the desert. He’s dusty and dirty. So there’s the mariachi. Then you have to make that rough a little bit, as he’s been out there for years. We had to kind of get in character. They would say, ‘Can you make it more ethnic sounding?’ They didn’t want to say, ‘Sing it like a Mexican.’ I told them not to worry, it will come out that way."

Continue reading »

Album review: Los Lobos' 'Tin Can Trust'

Los_lobos_tin_can_240 It’s easy to get seduced by the relaxed bluesy shading of Los Lobos’ “Tin Can Trust,” but that doesn’t mean there aren’t moments that provide a jolt. Songwriting partners for more than a dozen albums now, Louis Perez and David Hidalgo can still chronicle the working class with vivid specificity. When Hidalgo sings “It’s only love I bring” on the title track, it’s a gripping moment of resignation; he’s channeling a narrator who seemingly knows full-well that adoration doesn’t always go as far as cash in a recession.

Recorded in the East L.A. neighborhood where Los Lobos were birthed in the early ‘70s, there’s plenty of scruff in the stories on “Tin Can Trust.” The 11 tracks are all carefully decorated, be it the vintage guitar strut of “On Main Street” or the sparse atmospheres of “27 Spanishes,” where the hand drums, rhythmic clanks and jagged guitars reverberate as if they were laid down in an alley.

Just as unsavory are the noir-ish horns that punctuate “West L.A. Fadeaway,” where Hidalgo sings of running into an “old mistake.” If there’s a qualm to be had here, it’s that Los Lobos make the grit sound a little too comfortable. Opener “Burn It Down” simmers, but never catches aflame, setting the stage for a collection of strife that doesn’t really gets its hands dirty. Make no mistake, the storytelling is detailed and the musicianship is precision-sharp, but dotted with faithful Spanish-language takes on cumbia and Norteno styles, and one unnecessary blues-jam interlude, “Tin Can Trust” ultimately eases into traditionalism.

— Todd Martens

Los Lobos
“Tin Can Trust”
(Shout Factory)
Three stars (Out of four)


Clicking on Green Links will take you to a third-party e-commerce site. These sites are not operated by the Los Angeles Times. The Times Editorial staff is not involved in any way with Green Links or with these third-party sites.

Los Lobos trust in the creative process with 'Tin Can' album

Los Lobos studio 
It was fascinating to watch a new Los Lobos song grow from conception to completion over the course of three days in the spring that I popped in and out of the group’s recording sessions for the new “Tin Can Trust” album coming out Aug. 3.

Part of the creative process I got to see up close involved the collaboration between longtime songwriting partners David Hidalgo and Louie Perez. Hidalgo usually comes up with the music first, then Perez writes the lyrics.

For the final song they were recording, “The Lady and the Rose,” Perez delivered the lyrics to Hidalgo in the studio the same day he was scheduled to record the vocal. After trying out what Perez had written, Hidalgo suggested they drop a line in the song’s chorus that Perez wrote to indicate who was talking. The line they eliminated was “…said the Lady of the Rose,” a reference to Our Lady of Guadalupe, the subject of the song.

Perez said he didn’t mind; Hidalgo often fine-tunes his lyrics so they feel comfortable as he sings them. So even though that line doesn’t appear in the finished song, they kept it as the title.

Then band member Steve Berlin added a twist of his own — inadvertently — when he sent Perez an MP3 file of the final mix of the track.

“If you recall,” Perez told me in an e-mail a couple of weeks later, “I had the line ‘the Lady of the Rose,’ which we decided not to use in the song, but reserve it as the title. Well, when Steve just sent this, he mistakenly labeled it ‘The Lady And the Rose.’ I really dig it better. So now I have a new title. I love when this ... happens. I find that if you don't resist, it can be like getting presents on your doorstep. Lots of grinning often ensues.”

Look for more on Los Lobos' recent recording sessions on the cover of Sunday's Arts & Books section.

-- Randy Lewis

Photo (l-r): David Hidalgo, Steve Berlin, Louie Perez and Cesar Rosas listen to playbacks on their new "Tin Can Trust" album at Manny's Estudio in Lincoln Heights. Credit: Bob Chamberlin / Los Angeles Times


Clicking on Green Links will take you to a third-party e-commerce site. These sites are not operated by the Los Angeles Times. The Times Editorial staff is not involved in any way with Green Links or with these third-party sites.

Robert Plant meets Los Lobos: 'What a thrill'

Louie Perez 1-2010

What’s the response for a songwriter when a rock god decides to record one of your tunes?

That question came to mind when I got word last week that Robert Plant’s new solo album, "Band of Joy," due in September, would include, among other roots folk, rock and country songs, his version of Los Lobos’ "Angel Dance" from their 1990 album, "The Neighborhood."

So I put the question to Louie Perez, who wrote the haunting and bittersweet tune with his longtime songwriting collaborator, David Hidalgo.

"It was a surprise cuz it wasn't pitched by my publishing peeps," Perez said in an e-mail. "[I] haven't heard it yet. I actually talked to him about a week ago -- [he was] asking if David and I were interested in being in the video. Apparently he's been a fan of our songs for a long time. What a huge compliment as well as a thrill to talk to him."

And what a boost if it sells even half of what "Raising Sand," Plant's multiplatinum, multiple Grammy-winning collaboration with Alison Krauss, did.

“Band of Joy,” which will be coproduced by Plant and Americana musician-songwriter-producer Buddy Miller, isn’t slated to surface until Sept. 14 -- about five weeks after Los Lobos' new album, "Tin Can Trust," hits the streets Aug. 3. In the meantime, here’s a scorching 1991 live version from one of the L.A. music scene’s finest.  You can imagine where Plant might want to go with it.

-- Randy Lewis

Photo: Louie Perez. Credit: Bob Chamberin/Los Angeles Times


Clicking on Green Links will take you to a third-party e-commerce site. These sites are not operated by the Los Angeles Times. The Times Editorial staff is not involved in any way with Green Links or with these third-party sites.
Advertisement
Connect

Recommended on Facebook



In Case You Missed It...

Video



Recent Posts


Tweets and retweets from L.A. Times staff writers.

Categories


Archives
 



Get Alerts on Your Mobile Phone

Sign me up for the following lists:



In Case You Missed It...