Los Angeles Times

In perfect harmony

Sisters find YouTube glory with their soaring covers of Mexican folk songs

- By Randall Roberts

Once you’re exposed to its beauty, there’s no mistaking “blood harmony.” It’s coded into the Everly Brothers’ effervesce­nt duets, the Beach Boys’ sublime vocal work and the Jackson 5’s soulful arrangemen­ts: the unified tones of siblings who, sharing DNA, converge to create musical perfection.

The millions who have found Dueto Dos Rosas’ distinctiv­ely sublime YouTube videos know that sound. It’s in the dozens of clips set against mountains and deserts that capture sisters Emily, 22, and Sheyla Rosas, 17, harmonizin­g to vintage Mexican rancheras and folk songs. Shot by their mother, Magdalena, the videos recall her childhood — “when you were little and looking at the mountains in the sun,” as she says — growing up in a Oaxacan pueblo.

Though most are filmed outside of San Diego, other Dueto Dos Rosas videos feature the sisters soaring through similarly sourced oldies while side-by-side in their home. Outside the frame, family patriarch Hipolito Rosas can often be heard accompanyi­ng them with acoustic guitar on canciones by such Mexican songwritin­g legends as Pepe Aguilar, José Alfredo Jiménez and Vicente Fernández.

The scenic backdrops, though, aren’t what drives their YouTube channel. It’s something else, says Emily, sitting room with her sister and parents. “Our voices were made to be together,” she says.

As the rest of her family collaborat­ed on the music, Magdalena learned how to shoot quality video and use editing software. Her impetus: “Since they are our kids, what else can we do?”

So far, so good: Their YouTube videos have nearly 75 million views. On Saturday, they’ll play the twoday Viva! Pomona festival, where they’ll harmonize along with a hip LatinX community of young artists looking to both celebrate and upend musical traditions.

Since uploading their first video four years ago, Emily and Sheyla have built an envious following across Latin America. Headquarte­rs is the kitchen table and living room of the Rosas’ secondfloo­r apartment, located in one of hundreds of housing complexes that dot the land between Temecula and San Diego.

Their musical curiosity was sparked as kids. Hipolito used to play around with the guitar. He noticed that Emily could sing whatever notes he played, and when Sheyla was old enough to try, the sisters figured out how to lock into harmony.

One day in the early ’10s, Emily says, their grandpa was listening to music by 1970s mariachi group Las Jilguerill­as. She and her sister were struck by how sibling-singers Amparo Juárez and Imelda Higuera Juárez were melding their voices. They started searching YouTube for Las Jilguerill­as music and struck gold, Emily says, calling it “like a whole new genre for us. We had heard rancheras growing up, but these voices were different.”

As they explored, Dueto Dos Rosas stepped into a musical stream awash in history, part of what John Koegel, a music professor at Cal State Fullerton, called in an email “a very long tradition of duet singing (male-male, femalefema­le, male-female) in Mexican and Mexican American popular music traditions and repertorie­s.”

When Viva! Pomona founder and curator Rene Contreras first came across Dueto Dos Rosas, he made a point to play some of their music for his Mexican grandfathe­r. “He knew every lyric they were singing,” Contreras said. “When the song was over, he gave me a strange look and asked me in Spanish, ‘Why are you listening to such old music? I would listen to these songs as a teenager.’ ”

Within days of the sisters unveiling new music, many of their 220,000-plus followers have listened and commented, and that activity adds up. The views earn Dueto Dos Rosas enough money to keep the operation going. Payouts have bought them a faster computer, better music production software and elegant wardrobes to wear in the videos.

The older daughter manages to be a full-time college student between video shoots, and her sister is beginning her senior year at San Marco High School. Both say their goal is to become full-time musicians, but add that they’d be interested in behind-the-scenes careers if the YouTube well runs dry.

For their parents, the notion of their daughters seeking to make a living through music is a wonderful turn of events. “You just live once, and I think you should do what you like to do, anywhere you are, however you want to. Just be yourself,” Magdelena says. She works as a caregiver, a career she left after years of less gratifying work cleaning houses.

With notes of wonder and pride, their mother adds that she hears them sing every day. “I don’t get it,” she says with a laugh. When they hit their stride, she says her husband exclaims in Spanish, “This is the one that’s going to hit everyone’s heart.”

 ?? Hayne Palmour IV The San Diego Union-Tribune ?? SHEYLA, left, and Emily Rosas have racked up video views with their versions of old favorites. As Dueto Dos Rosas, they’ll perform at Viva! Pomona on Saturday.
Hayne Palmour IV The San Diego Union-Tribune SHEYLA, left, and Emily Rosas have racked up video views with their versions of old favorites. As Dueto Dos Rosas, they’ll perform at Viva! Pomona on Saturday.

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