Los Angeles Times

Get ready to dance ... to cumbia

Mexico’s Los Ángeles Azules aims to get Coachella fans moving to the traditiona­l music.

- By Randy Lewis randy.lewis@latimes.com

Over the last 35 years, Mexico’s Los Ángeles Azules has become one of the country’s top-selling bands using something of a radical strategy: introducin­g new generation­s to cumbia, the style of dance music considered as unhip in some corners of the Spanish-speaking world as the polka is in the U.S.

The group in recent years has added yet another twist to a genre that younger audiences often dismissed as the antiquated music of their parents and grandparen­ts: a hybrid called “cumbia sinfónica” that combines the compelling bounce of cumbia with the expansive sonic possibilit­ies of a symphony orchestra, exemplifie­d in the group’s latest album, “De Plaza en Plaza.”

“It is a grand experiment,” said lead singer and spokesman Erik De la Pena, who joined the six Avante Mejia siblings — Alfredo, Cristina, Elias, Guadalupe, Pepe and Jorge — 18 years ago.

He spoke this month through a translator during an interview from the band’s home in Iztapalapa, Mexico — a borough a few miles south of Mexico City — on a rare break from a typically intensive schedule of shows across Mexico, Central and South America. That itinerary also includes the band’s debut performanc­e later this month at the Golden voice presented Coach ella Valley Music and Arts Festival.

They were slated to perform opening night of the festival as well as this Friday along with a between-weekends slot headlining the Chella Latino music festival with Cuco, Helado Negro and Ocho Ojos on Thursday at the Riverside County Fairground­s in Indio.

“With cumbia sinfónica , we wanted to demonstrat­e that music which is more refined, like symphonic music, can be mixed with something popular like cumbia,” De la Pena said. “It’s a way of not putting any brands, any labels on the music, and saying that both audiences can enjoy both kinds of music: the popular and the symphonic.” Asked whether audiences have totally embraced his band’s take on cumbia by now, De la Pena said, “I don’t want to say we have been fully accepted until we perform. But we are sure we are going to do what we know how to do best. The people will do the rest.”

The booking of Los Ángeles Azules (the Blue Angels) marks the first time that traditiona­l Mexican music has been on the lineup at Coachella. In previous years indie rock and other Spanish-language acts, including Puerto Rico’s Calle 13, Mexico’s Café Tacuba and Instituto Mexicano del Sonido (the Mexican Institute of Sound) have performed on one of Coachella’s multiple stages.

“I’ve been listening to their music ever since I can remember,” said Rene Contreras, who booked the band for Coachella’s Sonora stage, which largely spotlights Latino music. “I’m Mexican American, and you’d always hear their music at family parties, at backyard parties in the Inland Empire, in L.A. or even in Orange County. It’s stuff my parents played, really iconic cumbia that’s heard all over South America and all Spanishspe­aking countries.”

Bringing the group Azules to Coachella, Contreras hopes, “will spark a connection. Coachella has a lot of younger kids [attending] and their parents think it’s a place where people do crazy things, that it’s a giant party. When they find out Los Ángeles Azules are playing, it might be a shock for a lot of parents. They’ll be asking ‘Por que? Por que?’ [Why? Why?] But they have influenced an entire generation, and it is great that they have the kind of platform they deserve.”

In addition, Contreras noted that the creation of the Chella show between Coachella weekends will give those parents and others a second chance to catch Los Ángeles Azules, given that Coachella tickets traditiona­lly are snapped up long before the talent lineup is announced.

Although cumbia originated in Colombia, Los Ángeles Azules has found widespread acceptance throughout Mexico by blending that genre’s traditiona­l elements with pulsing rhythms and textures of electronic dance music.

A song such as “Mi Cantar” (My Song), which features Trevi on the album, hints at influences beyond the borders of Mexico, with echoes of Italian film composer Ennio Morricone.

“Mi Nina Mujer” (My Woman), with Mexican American pop duo Ha*Ash, is built on a chord progressio­n and mood typical of 1950s American R&B and doo-wop.

With its inventive blend of disparate elements, “De Plaza en La Plaza” has sold more than 600,000 copies, constituti­ng double platinum sales status in Mexico, the first album by a Mexican act to hit that threshold in more than 15 years. Guest appearance­s by Spanish-language music world stars, among them Gloria Trevi, Natalia Lafourcade, Rodrigo y Gabriela, Pepe Aguilar and Fito Paez, also helped boost the album’s popularity.

Coachella, however, isn’t the band’s first venture to the U.S., or to California. Last summer the group joined the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic, under Music Director Gustavo Dudamel, for a career high-point performanc­e at the Hollywood Bowl that De la Pena described as “a great, great honor.”

Just as Dudamel has done during his tenure with the orchestra, Los Ángeles Azules has striven to build and strengthen bridges with music. That mission will be all the more timely amid the often polarized debate over U.S.-Mexico relations and the Trump administra­tion’s frequently antagonist­ic attitude toward immigrants from this country’s southern neighbors.

“With the political climate going on right now,” De la Pena said, “we feel like we’re contributi­ng to breaking those barriers that no one else [but musicians and artists] can break. The human spirit cannot be held back with a simple wall.”

Rather than muting any sense of celebratio­n the band members might otherwise feel about the compliment of landing a performanc­e slot at Coachella, the political turmoil makes them feel “more inspired — absolutely.”

“We’re all one people, we all live on the same planet,” he said. “When you land in a plane, both the first class and the regular class people all touch down at the same time.”

 ?? Seitrack ?? LOS ÁNGELES AZULES’ shows are a first for traditiona­l Mexican music on Coachella’s lineup.
Seitrack LOS ÁNGELES AZULES’ shows are a first for traditiona­l Mexican music on Coachella’s lineup.

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