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Under probe for glorifying drug cartels, Mexican band releases song with positive message to clear name
Under probe for glorifying drug cartels, Mexican band releases song with positive message to clear name

Malay Mail

time6 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Malay Mail

Under probe for glorifying drug cartels, Mexican band releases song with positive message to clear name

GUADALAJARA (Mexico), June 17 — A popular Mexican band under investigation for glorifying a wanted drug lord has released an anti-narco song in a bid to clear its name. The band, Los Alegres del Barranco, is accused of condoning crime over a song praising Nemesio Oseguera, head of the powerful Jalisco New Generation Cartel in western Mexico. In April, the United States, which has designated the cartel as a terrorist organisation, revoked the band's visas for displaying images of Oseguera during a concert and last month prosecutors in Jalisco state opened a probe into the group. In a bid to curry favour with the authorities, the band released a new song on YouTube on Sunday titled 'El Consejo' (The Advice). Its lyrics warn that there are only two avenues open to those who become involved in drug trafficking: 'the pantheon (of dead traffickers) or prison.' The Jalisco prosecutor's office reacted positively to the new track, which had garnered nearly 80,000 views on Monday, saying that 'by spreading a positive message in a song, there is a possibility that the investigation will be suspended.' However, the band remains under investigation for suspected illicit funding, prosecutors said. Several Mexican states have cracked down on 'narcocorridos,' a controversial subgenre of regional Mexican folk music that includes shout outs to drug traffickers. Earlier this month, the popular Los Tucanes de Tijuana band was fined more than $36,000 for performing songs glorifying drug cartels in the northern city of Chihuahua. Performers of drug ballads have themselves also been targets of gang violence. In late May, five members of the group Fugitivo were found dead in Tamaulipas state, days after being hired to perform a concert. Their deaths were blamed on suspected drug traffickers. — AFP

Popular band fined $36,000 for performing songs glorifying drug cartels in Mexico
Popular band fined $36,000 for performing songs glorifying drug cartels in Mexico

CBS News

time05-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • CBS News

Popular band fined $36,000 for performing songs glorifying drug cartels in Mexico

Why Trump is pushing military help for Mexico to help fight cartels Why Trump is pushing military help for Mexico Why Trump is pushing military help for Mexico A popular Mexican band has been fined more than $36,000 for performing songs glorifying drug cartels, authorities in the northern city of Chihuahua announced Wednesday. At a Los Tucanes de Tijuana performance on Saturday, nearly a third of their songs were "narcocorridos" glamorizing drug traffickers, according to city official Pedro Oliva. The songs "glorified crime or alluded to the perpetrators of illegal acts," Oliva said in a television interview. Los Tucanes were banned from performing in their home city Tijuana from 2008 to 2023 for alleged shoutouts to two drug traffickers during a concert. Los Tucanes de Tijuana attend The 23rd Annual Latin Grammy Awards at Michelob ULTRA Arena on November 17, 2022 in Las Vegas, The Latin Recording Academy Several states across the country have imposed restrictions on the controversial subgenre of regional music, which is growing rapidly, even beyond Mexico's borders. In April, the ban sparked a riot during a concert after a singer refused to perform some of his most popular songs. Peso Pluma, who blends corridos with rap and hip-hop, was the seventh most-streamed artist in the world in 2024, according to Spotify. President Claudia Sheinbaum has rejected the idea of banning "narcocorridos," preferring to launch a music competition "for peace and against addictions" to counter the influence of drug culture among young people. Two months ago, the United States revoked the visas of the band Los Alegres del Barranco for showing images of a wanted drug lord during a concert. "I'm a firm believer in freedom of expression, but that doesn't mean that expression should be free of consequences," U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau said at the time. "The last thing we need is a welcome mat for people who extol criminals and terrorists." At the end of May, members of Grupo Firme canceled a concert in the United States, saying their visas were under "administrative review" by the U..S embassy. Musicians in Mexico sometimes get caught up in cartel violence themselves. Last month, the bodies of five Mexican musicians from the band Grupo Fugitivo, were found in Reynosa along the Texas border. At least nine alleged cartel members were arrested and later drugs and weapons were seized in connection to the murders. In January this year, a small plane was reported to have dropped pamphlets on a northwestern city threatening around 20 music artists and influencers for alleged dealings with a warring faction of the Sinaloa drug cartel. In 2018, armed men kidnapped two members of the musical group "Los Norteños de Río Bravo," whose bodies were later found on the federal highway connecting Reynosa to Río Bravo, Tamaulipas. In 2013, 17 musicians from the group Kombo Kolombia were executed by alleged cartel members in the northeastern state of Nuevo Leon, allegedly because of links to a rival gang.

Mexican band Los Tucanes fined US$36,000 for singing songs glorifying drug cartels at Chihuahua concert
Mexican band Los Tucanes fined US$36,000 for singing songs glorifying drug cartels at Chihuahua concert

Malay Mail

time05-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Malay Mail

Mexican band Los Tucanes fined US$36,000 for singing songs glorifying drug cartels at Chihuahua concert

MEXICO CITY, June 5 — A popular Mexican band has been fined more than US$36,000 for performing songs glorifying drug cartels, authorities in the northern city of Chihuahua announced Wednesday. At a Los Tucanes de Tijuana performance on Saturday, nearly a third of their songs were 'narcocorridos' glamorising drug traffickers, according to city official Pedro Oliva. The songs 'glorified crime or alluded to the perpetrators of illegal acts,' Oliva said in a television interview. Los Tucanes were banned from performing in their home city Tijuana from 2008 to 2023 for alleged shout outs to two drug traffickers during a concert. Several states across the country have imposed restrictions on the controversial subgenre of regional music, which is growing rapidly, even beyond Mexico's borders. Peso Pluma, who blends corridos with rap and hip-hop, was the seventh most-streamed artist in the world in 2024, according to Spotify. President Claudia Sheinbaum has rejected the idea of banning 'narcocorridos,' preferring to launch a music competition 'for peace and against addictions' to counter the influence of drug culture among young people. Two months ago, the United States revoked the visas of the band Los Alegres del Barranco for showing images of a wanted drug lord during a concert. At the end of May, members of Grupo Firme cancelled a concert in the United States, saying their visas were under 'administrative review' by the US embassy. — AFP

Los Alegres del Barranco Cancel Show in Michoacán for ‘Security Concerns'
Los Alegres del Barranco Cancel Show in Michoacán for ‘Security Concerns'

Yahoo

time31-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Los Alegres del Barranco Cancel Show in Michoacán for ‘Security Concerns'

Mexican band Los Alegres del Barranco canceled their scheduled performance on Friday (May 30) in the municipality of Maravatío, in the Mexican state of Michoacán, citing security concerns, the group's spokesperson, Luis Alvarado, confirmed to Billboard Español. 'In agreement with the event sponsor, local authorities, state security agencies, and members of the band, it was decided to postpone the event due to security concerns,' Alvarado said in a brief statement, without providing further details about the postponement or a new date for the performance. More from Billboard A Timeline of Narcocorrido Bans in Mexico Shakira's D.C. Pride Concert Canceled a Day After Boston Show Is Called Off Niko McKnight, Brian McKnight's Estranged Son, Dies at 32 After Cancer Battle Previously, the event's sponsor, Chilangos Grill, had announced on Thursday (May 29) that the show would be rescheduled 'for reasons beyond the control of the company and the band.' Organizers reported that the concert was sold out. 'Our priority has always been and will continue to be the well-being and safety of our audience, artists, and everyone involved with the company, which is why a new date for the performance will be scheduled,' read the statement on social media. The group had recently secured a legal injunction allowing them to perform narcocorridos in Michoacán, despite a state decree that prohibits the dissemination of music or expressions that glorify crime in public spaces, which went into effect in April. Los Alegres del Barranco became the first act from the regional Mexican genre to be formally accused by the Jalisco State Prosecutor's Office of alleged glorification of criminal activities. Authorities in that state, located in western Mexico, are investigating the group after images of Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, alias 'El Mencho,' leader of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), were projected during their performance of the song 'El del Palenque' on March 29 at an auditorium at the University of Guadalajara. This incident even led the U.S. to revoke work and tourist visas for the band members, as announced on April 1 by U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau in a statement on X. The band, its representative, and the promoter are facing investigation from the Jalisco Prosecutor's Office for four performances in different municipalities of that state in which they allegedly glorified criminal activities, according to information published on May 9 by the same office. Ten out of Mexico's 32 states have implemented various bans against narcocorridos or any expression that promotes or glorifies criminal activities, though such bans have not yet become federal law. The cancellation of Los Alegres del Barranco's concert also comes after five members of Grupo Fugitivo — a locally known regional Mexican music group — were found dead in the state of Tamaulipas on May 29, four days after being reported missing. The deaths are allegedly linked to a faction of a drug cartel operating in that region of the country. Best of Billboard Chart Rewind: In 1989, New Kids on the Block Were 'Hangin' Tough' at No. 1 Janet Jackson's Biggest Billboard Hot 100 Hits H.E.R. & Chris Brown 'Come Through' to No. 1 on Adult R&B Airplay Chart

Why much of Mexico is banning pop ballads about drug traffickers
Why much of Mexico is banning pop ballads about drug traffickers

Yahoo

time11-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Why much of Mexico is banning pop ballads about drug traffickers

In a packed nightclub in Mexico City, hundreds of young people sang along as a band played a popular song narrating the life of a foot soldier for the Sinaloa drug cartel. I like to work/ And if the order is to kill / You don't question it. And for those who misbehave/ There's no chance to explain/ I throw them into the grave. Narcocorridos — or drug ballads — are more popular than ever in Mexico, where a new generation that came of age during the ongoing drug war has embraced songs that recount and often glamorize both the spoils and perils of organized crime. But the genre is increasingly under attack. About a third of Mexico's states and many of its cities have enacted some kind of ban on the performance of songs about narcos in recent years, with violators subject to heavy fines and jail time. Mexico City may be next. Mayor Clara Brugada said she plans to introduce a law that would bar the songs from being played at government events and on government property. "We can't be promoting violence through music," she said. The bans, which come amid President Trump's hyper-focus on drug trafficking in Mexico, have sparked debates here about freedom of expression and state censorship and have raised provocative questions: Do narcocorridos merely reflect reality in a nation gripped by powerful drug gangs? Or do they somehow shape it? Said Amaya, the organizer of Guitarrazos, the event at the nightclub in Mexico City where multiple singers performed narcocorridos last week, said government focus should be on improving security, not persecuting young musicians. "If you change the reality, the music might change," Amaya said. "But you're not going to change the reality by censoring songs." Drug ballads belong to the genre of corridos, a musical tradition born in the 1800s that helped chronicle life at a time when many people couldn't read or write. Each song told a story. There were corridos about the exploits of bandits and outlaws, some of them Robin Hood-esque characters who outwitted oafish authorities and helped the poor. Others narrated chapters of the Mexican Revolution or the U.S. invasion of Mexico in 1846. In more recent years, as Mexico became a key gateway for the U.S. drug market, enriching some people and claiming the lives of hundreds of thousands of others, musicians have described that, too. "The entire social history of Mexico is narrated through corridos," said José Manuel Valenzuela Arce, a sociologist in Tijuana. "It's an intangible part of our cultural heritage." Valenzuela wrote a book about the newest version of drug ballads, known as corridos tumbados, which combine acoustic guitar, brassy horns and the aesthetic and lyrical content of U.S. gangster rap. Proponents of the music, like artist Peso Pluma, who performs in ballistic vests and sings of diamond-encrusted pistols and shipments of cocaine, have brought the genre to global audiences. The 25-year-old musician, whose name translates to "Featherweight," was the seventh most streamed artist in the world on Spotify last year. In 2023, former President Obama included in his top 10 songs of the year a Peso Pluma song that does not touch on drug trafficking. Musicians dedicated to the genre have long faced backlash from the government, which since the 1980s has tried, at various times, to ban the music. But the long-standing controversy exploded back into public life this year after a concert in Michoacan state by the band Los Alegres del Barranco, which displayed images of Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes, better known as El Mencho, who heads the Jalisco New Generation Cartel. The band played at a venue not far from a gruesome cartel training camp that authorities had just discovered. The concert outraged many Mexicans, and Michoacan Gov. Alfredo Ramírez Bedolla soon announced a ban on public performances that glorify crime and violence. That was followed by similar measures in other states, including Aguascalientes, Queretaro and Mexico state. Days later, the Trump administration announced it was revoking the U.S. visas of the members of Los Alegres del Barranco. "The last thing we need is a welcome mat for people who extol criminals and terrorists," Deputy Secretary of State Chris Landau said on X. President Claudia Sheinbaum says she does not support the bans, but also doesn't support the music. She recently announced a national song competition for compositions about subjects other than drug trafficking. "More than banning, it's about educating, guiding, and getting young people to stop listening to that music," she said. But the bans have momentum — a recent poll found that 62% of those surveyed support prohibitions on narcocorridos — and they have put the genre's stars in a tricky position. Their fans demand they play their hits, but doing so is increasingly risky. Performing in one of the states that had banned the songs last month, artist Luis R. Conríquez refused to play his ballads that romanticize drug traffickers. Audience members were enraged, forcing him off stage as they flung insults, beer bottles and chairs, and later destroyed his band's instruments. Others musicians, such as corridos tumbados star Natanael Cano, have pressed on despite the bans. The 24-year-old performed at an annual fair in Aguascalientes state this month just days after the local authorities warned musicians not to play narco songs. He began his set with songs from his repertoire that touch on love and other subjects. But soon fans were pleading for popular songs such as "Cuerno azulado," which talks about blue-tinted AK-47s and pacts between drug traffickers and the government. Cano first told audience members they should press their leaders to roll back the bans. "You have to ask your government," Cano said. "Don't come here asking me for it.' But eventually he acquiesced, playing a song called "Pacas de Billete," or "stacks of cash," which alludes to "El Chapo," the Sinaloa drug cartel kingpin Joaquín Guzmán. After the event's organizers cut the sound, Cano's team activated their own audio system. Eventually, though, the lights were turned out and the artist left the stage and headed directly to the airport. Local authorities have not pressed charges against him. A few years ago, Cano was slapped with a $50,000 fine for performing narcocorridos in Chihuahua, one of the first states to enact a ban. Read more: She sang for 'El Chapo.' Now the cartel kingpin's lawyer wants to be a ranchera star Los Alegres del Barranco, the band that flashed a picture of El Mencho in Michoacan, has tried to skirt the laws in recent days with karaoke events in which they play the music but project lyrics for the audience to sing. For many stars, the bigger threat may be organized crime itself. Drug traffickers often pay to be featured in songs — Peso Pluma has acknowledged taking money from them — and dozens of the genre's stars have been killed over the years, sometimes by rivals of the hit men and drug dealers they've portrayed. Peso Pluma canceled an appearance in Tijuana last year after he received death threats. Those who support the bans say they are necessary to keep the next generation of young people from romanticizing violence, and to honor those who have lost loved ones to bloodshed. "Will we tell the victims and their families that it is better to respect the freedom of expression of those who advocate violence than to take measures to safeguard the lives of Mexicans?" columnist Mauricio Farah Gebara wrote in Milenio newspaper. But for the genre's devotees, the bans smack of classicism. It's a double standard, said a musician named Rosul, who often performs narcocorridos and who attended the lively party in Mexico City last week. "Netflix can release a series about drug traffickers and win awards and get applause," she said. "But if somebody from the 'hood sings about the same thing, it's an apology for violence?" Banning the genre, she said, is a losing battle. Young people, after all, hate being told what to do. "This only makes it more appealing," she said. "This will only make us stronger." Times special correspondent Cecilia Sánchez Vidal contributed to this report. Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

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