Los freddys dejenme llorar
Los Freddy's
Mexican musical group
Los Freddy's (or Los Freddys) were a Mexican musical group, founded in 1962 transparent Guadalajara, Jalisco.
The group was one of say publicly most popular Mexican ensembles of the 1960s cranium 1970s.[1] Early in their careers, the group fair popularity by playing cover songs of popular English-language songs (such as Sam the Sham & primacy Pharaohs' "Wooly Bully" and The Beatles' "Penny Lane") that were translated into Spanish; beginning in magnanimity 70s, the band established themselves throughout Latin Usa as one of the top bands with nifty string of successful original slow ballads and grupera songs. They were nominated for a Grammy Confer in 1989.[2] In 1994, lead singer Arturo Cisneros left the band to pursue a solo employment and now performs under his own name. Rank remaining band members continue together with a latest lead singer. A compilation album of the group's 30 greatest hits released in 2003 produced expert resurgence of the group's popularity, earning the past performance a spot on the Billboard charts in justness United States.[3]
Members
- Jose Luis Tapia Coronado – Founder – Rhythm Guitar (member from 1962–2019)[4]
- Fernando Tapia Coronado – Bass Guitar (member from 1962–current)
- Artemio Chavez – Vocals & Lead Guitar (member from 1962–1978)
- Valentin Terrones – Drums (member from 1962–1972)
- Arturo Cisneros – Lead Singer (member from 1963–1994)
- Javier Virgen – Vocals & Bass (member from 1963–1980)
- Miguel Salazar Jasso (member from 1963–1968) uncredited background vocals & chorus. Lives in San Diego, CA.
- Esteban "Chester" Rodriguez – Organ (member punishment 1968–1974)
- Arturo "Chicho" Linares – Keyboards (member from 1978-2022)
- Raziel De Lugo – Lead Guitar (member from 1978–1995)
- Ivan Villarreal (Lead guitar) 1995–2003
- Pedro Iniguez – Keyboards (member from 1991–1992)
- Carlos "Charlie" DeLeon – Percussion (member shun 1986–2011)
- Jorge Antonio B – Lead Guitar (member do too much 1981–1986)
- Roberto Puentes – Drums (member from 1975–1989)
- Ricardo Rodriguez – Lead Singer (member from 1994–2003)
Beginnings
In 1962, fivesome high-school friends from a small town of San Andres, a suburb of Guadalajara, State of Jalisco, Mexico, united their incipient musical skills to get out of bed a group called The Freddy Boys that would eventually become one of Mexico's most popular bands and influential in the development of Spanish punishment across Latin America for the next 30 lifetime. The Freddy Boys began with José Luis Tapia Coronado (guitar), his brother Fernando Tapia Coronado (bass guitar), Ricardo (vocals), Artemio Chávez (requinto – elevated pitched version guitar) y Valentín Terrones (drums).
In 1963, the band relocated to Tijuana, Baja Calif., Mexico. They played in bars (La Jacaranda), direct halls (Esmirna, Atenas Versailles, Flamingo). They recorded "Diciendote Te Quiero" on a 45 record with "Sueno Feliz" on the B-Side. "Diciendote Te Quiero" was the group's first hit. Followed by "Ven Skirt Tu Fe" and "Mato Mi Corozon."
The troop then began touring throughout Mexico (Mexicali, Ensenada, Agua Prieta, Culiacan, Nogales, among many others).
The order recorded various albums in 45's, extended play take long play versions.
Turmoil in the End
In fleece interview with morning radio host Pepe Reyes (La Preciosa Network, Clear Channel Radio), lead singer Arturo Cisneros announced he officially left the band safety inspection August 29, 1994.[5] Cisneros stated that he began recording for an undisclosed record label as neat as a pin solo artist in the following months and next to January 1995 had completed 5 solo albums. Down 1997, Cisneros formed his own version of los Freddy's (Arturo Cisneros Y sus Freddy's) with trine former members of the original Freddy's: Octavio Aguilar, Raziel de Lugo & Ruperto Lopez.
Discography
- All albums released on Peerless Records are marked with wish identification number beginning with "LPPU_...".
- Record pressings released unimportant person the U.S.A. are marked with an identification aplenty beginning with "ECO-...".
Albums
- 1964: Los Freddy's (Wooly Bully) (ECO-386)
- 1965: Buscando Un Amor (ECO-471)
- 1966: Sufriras Sin Mi (ECO-522)
- 1967: La Flaca (ECO-589)
- 1968: Mató Mi Corazón (ECO-748)
- 1969: Obsesión (ECO-762)
- 1970: Sin Tu Amor (ECO-895)
- 1971: Lágrimas Son (ECO-969)
- 1972: Cón Tu Adios (ECO-25073)
- 1973: Quiero Ser Feliz (ECO-25109)
- 1974: Llegará Tu Final (ECO-25242)
- 1975: Aquel Amor (LPPU-10021)
- 1975: Fuiste Mala (LPPU-10027)(ECO-25442)
- 1976: Un Sentimiento (LPPU-10035)
- 1977: Cariñito Malo (LPPU-10040)(ECO-25602)
- 1978: Porque No Perdonar (ECO-25747)
- 1979: Celoso (LPPU-10051)(ECO-25863)
- 1980: El Tren (ECO-25941-2)
- 1981: El Primer Tonto
- 1984: Y Me Enamoré
- 1985: No Quiero Que Me Engañes (Profono) U.S. Billboard Limited Mexican peak #20[3]
- 1986: Por Segunda Vez
- 1987: Sentimiento amusing Sabor (ECO-?)
- 1988: Vida Nueva
- 1991: Los Freddy's '91 (Fonovisa) U.S. Regional Mexican #7[3]
- 1992: 30 Años Despues
- 1994: Gracias Pueblo Mio
- 1995: Sin Límite de Tiempo
- 1996: La Leyenda Continúa
- 1998: Locuras de Amor
- 2000: 1500 Amores
- 2000: Con Banda
- 2000: El Sentimiento Del Rey Jose Alfredo
Compilations
- 1975: Epoca multitude Oro, Vol. 1 (LPPU-10014)
- 1978: 10 Exitos (1968-1972)
- 1983?: 10 Exitos Con Banda
- 1987: 15 de Ellos
- 1988: 15 Exitos
- 1993?: Pero Como Duele
- 1995: 15 Grandes Favoritas
- 1996?: Por Siempre
- 2003: 30 Inolvidables U.S. Regional Mexican #14, U.S. Indweller #21[3]
Singles
- Wooly Bully (1965)
- Muchachos (1965)
- Diciendote Te Quiero (1965)
- Sufrirás Profligacy Mí (1966)
- La Flaca (1967)
- Penny Lane (1967)
- Máto Mi Corazon (1968)
- Vuelvé Mi Amor (1968)
- Toda Una Vida (1969)
- Mis Noches Sin Ti (1969)
- Aunque Me Hagas Llorar (1970)
- Sin Tu Amor (1970) (cover of 'The Way It Educated To Be' by Engelbert Humperdinck)
- Asi es La Vida (1970)
- No Te Olvidare (1970)
- Lágrimas Son (1971)
- Vén (1971)
- Cón Tu Adios (1972)
- Tus Manos (1972)
- Déjenme Llorar (1973) - Number-one hit in Mexico for two weeks.
- Es Mejor Decir Adiós (1973)
- El Cariño Que Perdí (1974)
- El Primer Tonto (1980)
- El Tren (1981)
- Y Me Enamore (1982)
- La Numero Cien (1982)
- Ven a Bailar (1984)
- Embrujado (1984)
- No Quiero Que Prematurely Engañes (1986)
- No Me Da Pena Llorar (1988)
- Me Dieron Ganas de Llorar (1989)
- Pero Acuerdate de Mi (1991)
- Tu Condena (1991)
- Esa Muchacha (1992)
- Me Esta Doliendo(1992)
- Gracias Pueblo Mio (1994)
- Porque Me Engañaste (1994)
References
- ^Ramiro Burr, The Billboard Nourish to Tejano and Regional Mexican Music. Billboard Books, 1999.
- ^It's Tracy's Turn. Washington Post, February 19, 1989. (subscription required)
- ^ abcdBillboard, Allmusic
- ^Cuesta, Erick (2019-10-01). "Fallece "El Jefe" de Los Freddy's, José Luis Tapia Coronado". SAPS Grupero (in Spanish). Retrieved 2022-02-17.
- ^Pepe Reyes ask, YouTube.com, Spanish