Narcocorridos: The Drug War in Song

My name is Omar Shamout, and I’m a graduate journalism student at USC. I became interested in narcocorridos after reading about the escalating drug war amongst the cartels in Mexico. I wanted to examine why music that contains such violent and tragic subject matter is so popular amongst the Mexican and Mexican-American community in Los Angeles. Through the help of Anabell Romero, I was able to profile a band from Wilmington that plays narcorridos, and they proved to be a fascinating entry point into the Mexican music scene in LA.

Narcocorridos: The Drug War in Song

From a back alley in Wilmington, Calif., illuminated by the twinkling lights of the nearby oil refinery, the sounds of the Mexican-drug war come alive on a windy Wednesday evening. Not through gun shots, police sirens or the wailing of widowed mothers – but through song.

“Loyalty to the bosses, or you’re an enemy,” croons 27-year-old lead-singer Jesse Castañeda in Spanish into a microphone in his home garage, rehearsing for an upcoming show. The song is called “Scarface Reborn,” and it tells the violent tale of a Mexican drug lord executing his foes.

The Music

Like most played by four-piece Wilmington band Komando de la Klika, the song is known as a narcocorrido. Corridos, which are popular Mexican-folk ballads, have been around since the creation of the US – Mexico border in the 19th century, but the current form of narcocorridos took shape in the 1970s when lyrics evolved into sensationalistic descriptions of drug traffickers and drug violence.

“We sing a lot about killings and some of the violence that goes on in Mexico … about new drug lords or cartels,” says Castañeda, who is joined in the band by his brothers Henry, 30; Juan, 32; and friend Gerardo Moya, 29. All of them are first-generation Americans born and bred in Wilmington. The group, whose name Jesse translates as “soldiers for the people,” also plays other styles of northern-Mexican music such as rancheras and cumbias, which have nothing to do with drug violence.

The band’s set list is mostly made up of cover songs of well-known Mexican artists, but it is the violence-soaked songs of the drug war that they say pay their bills.

Though corridos are still popular south of the border, many Mexican officials are taking steps to stop this glorification of cartel culture.In May, the northwestern Mexican state of Sinaloa, which is home to the most powerful cartel in the country, banned public performances of narcocorridos. The nearby states of Chihuahua and Baja California have also banned radio and television stations from playing the songs. The crackdown has helped turn Los Angeles into the commercial hub of the genre.

Josh Kun, music critic and director of the Popular Music Project at USC’s Norman Lear Center, described the industry’s geographic shift north.

“Really where they have taken off, and where the real growth industry is in narcocorridos … is right here in Los Angeles,” said Kun. “The vast majority of the biggest names in narcocorrido … are, if not from Los Angeles and southern California – now based here,” Kun said.

Pasadena-born Gerardo Ortiz is a prominent example of local success in the genre. Ortiz took home six Billboard Mexican Music Awards in October, which are based on album sales and radio play. Ortiz still lives in the US, but he spent part of his youth in Sinaloa.

Even at the top of the charts, Ortiz, like other Mexican artists, is not immune to the violence in Mexico. In March, Ortiz escaped unharmed when armed gunmen attacked his vehicle after one of his concerts in Mazatlan, but his cousin and driver were killed, allegedly at the hands of drug lords unhappy with Ortiz’s songs glorifying their rivals. Several other popular narcocorrido singers have been gunned down in recent years such as Diego Rivas, who was murdered in Sinaloa on Nov. 14, and Sergio Vegas, who was killed there last year. As a result, southern California has become a safe haven for narcocorrido singers who may find themselves targets for violence down south.

In LA, narcocorridos can be heard daily on mainstream, Spanish-language radio stations such as KBUE-FM, which is one of the top-10 Spanish-language radio stations in the nation and averages more than 30,000 listeners every 15 minutes according to recent Arbitron ratings. Both Kun and Jesse Castañeda point out that the music has a broad fanbase in the Mexican and Mexican-American community that crosses boundaries of gender and age. Live shows can be heard throughout the city at venues such as El Rodeo night club in Pico Rivera, El Parral dance club in South Gate and Normandie Casino in Gardena.

The Escalation in Violence

Since Mexican President Felipe Calderon announced his crackdown on the cartels five-years ago, the drug war has only grown more violent. The Mexican government announced this year that it estimates 34,000 drug-related deaths occurred in the country between 2006-2010, though some advocacy groups, such as the peace movement led by poet Javier Sicilia, put the number around 40,000, which doesn’t include the thousands of Mexicans who have simply disappeared without a trace.

Narcocorridos have mirrored their homeland in recent years, with songs growing ever more graphic in response to the pandemic violence spreading its way across Mexico.

Kun describes the violent evolution of narcocorrido lyrics.

“In the 1970s, a narcocorrido singing about decapitation would have been unheard of – now it’s commonplace,” Kun said. “In the 70s, songs about humongous shipments, songs about battles between military police, federal police and local police would never have happened. Now, all of those things … you must have in your songs,” he continued.

Jesse agrees and says many artists try to one up each other to see who can sing the most violent song.

“Over the past couple years I think they’ve gotten worse, as have the times in Mexico,” he says.

The Gigs

On a Friday night in Gardena, Calif., Henry Castañeda pounds out a furious accordion solo as he moves across the stage with sweat pouring down his face. His brother Juan keeps the up-tempo rhythm going on the drums throughout their hour-long set. Jesse belts out the lyrics of “Scarface Reborn” in the lounge at the Normandie Casino, regaling the crowd with the tale of a vengeful drug lord and his 5.7-caliber pistol.

Groups of dolled-up women in their 20s and 30s, some with boyfriends and some without, gather around long tables sipping brightly-colored alcoholic drinks. Enticed by the music’s danceable beat, two women make their way to the dance floor, joined later by a couple eager to show off their moves.

Despite the graphic lyrics of most of their songs, Jesse says fans at their shows tend to skew young and female.

“There’s a lot of girls – a lot of the youth of today – youngsters 18 through 25, 27 [years-old],” he says.

One such fan is 23-year-old Santa Ana-resident Erandi Merino, who, like many others in attendance, showed up to the band’s latest show wearing a short black dress and heels.

Merino says that while she likes the music more for its sound than the gruesome stories, she’s not particularly bothered by the words.

“If the music is happy, and you’re drinking and you’re with friends … you’re just with it,” Merino says.

She also dismisses the notion that narcocorridos are a corruptive influence on children.

“It’s part of life. I grew up with it, so why can’t they? I didn’t grow up to be a violent person, so I don’t think they would either,” Merino says.

Jesse says that while his group doesn’t advocate violence, he and its members have an obligation as performers to play what’s popular amongst their audience.

“We’re not for all the violence. We’re peaceful people, but it’s mostly what the people want to hear,” he says. Henry chimes in. “We just have to go out there and make the money,” he says.

Merino says narcocorrido fans listen to the music for the same emotional reasons as fans of gangster rap.

“They feel powerful. They want to be like the people they talk about in the corridos,” she says.

However, Juan points out that they have played gigs where the more modern corridos are frowned upon.

“There’s been gigs we’ve gone to where people tell us ‘no corridos.’ They want more cumbias, more of the old-school corridos,” he says.

The Future

Kun said he believes that narcocorrido singers should stop paying lip service to the condemnation of violence and start actively critiquing it.

“Every narcocorrido singer I’ve ever interviewed … all say, immediately, that they are opposed to violence … yet none of them have written songs critiquing it,” Kun said.

Perhaps that process will start with Jesse, who says he has ambitions to write songs depicting tamer subject matter.

“I have given thought of making songs … drifting away from the cartel stories – that kind of tell stories about stuff we’ve been through … maybe not anti-violence – but just drifting another way,” Jesse says.

Until then, idealism will continue to give way to the stark realities of Mexican life, and the alley behind the Castañeda house, along with night clubs across Los Angeles, will reverberate with tales of war and death.

3 Comments on "Narcocorridos: The Drug War in Song"

  1. Narcocorridos may or may not be growing more graphic in Mexico. Various Mexican States have outlawed production companies from signing music deals that include narcocorridos as part of albums. This is exemplified by Sinaloa, where Mario Lopez Valdes outlawed narcocorridos. Calderon has similarly pressed for a federal ban on these. The outlawing of narcocorridos is the latest of stupid moves undertaken by the Conservative PAN. The government needs to (as major politicians in the PRI and AMLO propose) lift the prohibition on drugs. Drugs need to be treated as any product in the market but its supply and price needs to be controlled by a regulatory agency. This needs to happen if we want our narcocorridos back. More importantly, the so called war on drugs needs to be called off by Calderon and treated by what it is: a health problem. Drugs and cartels have existed in Mexico for decades. Cartels lived and worked independently without the type of violence we see today. Although they were much smaller 30 years ago (because they where in Colombia) the growth has resulted in serious challenges to the monopoly of force by the Mexican government.
    Because cartels were smaller, it logically follows that narcocorridos were not as popular. Narcocorridos are some of my favorite songs, but they were not popular until Los Tigres del Norte started singing a song called "Contrabando y Traicion," which they bought from a no-name band in San Jose. This is widely seen as the first narcocorrido.

  2. Thanks for your comment Juve Cortes. It was very informative. Calderon needs to act fast and do something to resolve this war on drugs that has taken the lives of thousands. It's very sad and I don't think it's the music causing it.

  3. Foolish to think music is the cause of violence!…in Mexico I believe its the corruption of officials that have given their citizens no choice!
    And nothing will change because that's been the norm for decades..

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