Tag Archives: Singers

Selena shines in music, fashion, and design

Although Selena Quintanilla Pérez, better known as Selena, followed in the footsteps of pioneering Tejana (Texas-Mexican) women solo singers such as Lydia Mendoza, Chelo Silva, Laura Canales, and Patsy Torres—as well as influential duos like Carmen y Laura, Las Hermanas Cantú, and Las Hermanas Gongora—she made the most significant impact in transforming both the sound of Tejano music and popular culture. Selena began singing at the age of 6, after her father, Abraham, recognized her remarkable vocal talent. Although she loved singing, performing did not come naturally to Selena. As she recalled in an interview, “I started singing when I was six and a half and we’d perform for relatives. My father would do this show-off-the-kids type of thing. I was very shy, and I hated it. I used to cry and throw my little tantrums. I didn’t want to sing in front of anybody because I was too shy.”

Selena tribute mural in Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco, Mexico.

A former member of the doo-wop band Los Dinos, Abraham served as the family’s primary musical influence and quickly involved Selena’s older siblings in her musical journey. Her brother, A.B., became the lead guitarist and producer of much of her music, while her sister, Suzette, stood out as the only prominent female drummer in contemporary Tejano music. Originally, the group performed under the name Southern Pearl and was deeply influenced by country music. Selena’s early performances took place in the family’s restaurant, Papagallo’s, where she regularly sang for customers, and one of her first live performances on television was on the local program The Johnny Canales show in Corpus Christi, Texas.

A Selena fan’s jacket.

Although Selena’s performances at local venues launched her career as a vocalist, she faced significant challenges finding audiences in larger venues. As she explained in an interview, “When we started performing . . . we struggled because when you’re a new group, no one’s going go pay money to see you, especially if you’re not with a large recording company, if you don’t have distribution, or publicity, or any promotion. You’re just there. It’s very difficult. Another problem was that I was so young and a girl. And, with a lot of promoters–and it still exists, although not as much as before–there’s the issue of machismo. They would tell my father straight to his face, ‘Not only is she too young, but there’s no way she could draw like a male artist.’ And, with that my father, the more the people shut doors on him, the more determined he becomes to prove them wrong.” By 1994, estimates of Selena’s net worth exceeded $5 million, yet she continued to live in the working class Molina neighborhood of Corpus Christi, next door to her parents.

A 1994 performance in San Antonio, Texas. Photo credit: Yvette Chavez.
Posing with her younger fans.

One of Selena’s greatest accomplishments was the remarkable success she achieved within the Tejano music genre. Not only did she open the door for a new generation of young women to enter the field, but she also expanded the reach of Tejano music to audiences it had never previously reached. While established Tejano groups like La Mafia and Mazz had built followings in northern Mexico and Mexico City, Selena y Los Dinos brought this distinct cultural sound to Puerto Rico, Central America, and across Mexico. At the time of her death, the group had scheduled tours in Chile, Brazil, and Venezuela. Unlike any Tejano artist before her, Selena both transformed the genre and brought its regional identity to a wider international stage.

Selena’s remarkable creative talents also extended into the realms of fashion and design. From a young age, she devoted herself to clothing design, often creating and sewing many of the outfits she wore during her concerts. Early sketches and drawings reveal her ambition to launch her own fashion line, which she initially named Moonchild–a reference to the Greek origin of her name. In 1992, Selena realized that dream by launching her own clothing line and opening the first Selena Etc. Boutique-Salon in Corpus Christi, Texas. She later expanded with a second boutique in San Antonio.

This according to the entry on Selena by Deborah Vargas in Latin music: Musicians, genres, and themes (2014). Find it in RILM Music Encyclopedias.

Below, Selena performs Fotos y recuerdos in 1994, a reworked version of The Pretenders song Back on the chain gang.

Related Bibliolore posts:

https://bibliolore.org/2021/04/16/selena-crosses-over/

https://bibliolore.org/2024/09/21/the-voice-of-el-pueblo/

https://bibliolore.org/2015/08/05/emma-abbott-in-the-heartland/

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Filed under Performers, Popular music, Reception, Voice

Sinéad O’Connor’s musical and political life

Irish singer Sinéad O’Connor’s expressive cover of the ballad Nothing compares 2 U, originally composed by Prince for his 1985 album The Family, turned into a worldwide hit in 1990. The song, which explored the pain of separation, received platinum and gold album awards in numerous countries and became O’Connor’s biggest hit. Her album I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got (featuring Nothing compares 2 U) was one of the world’s best selling albums of 1990 and was nominated for four Grammys. Sinéad spent parts of her youth in boarding schools and busking locally. At age 20, she moved to London and released her debut album The Lion and the Cobra, which went certified gold in the United States in 1987.

In 1992, she appeared on the popular U.S. sketch comedy show Saturday Night Live where famously she drew attention to sexual abuse in the Catholic Church by tearing up a picture of the Pope on live national television. Some of her songs explored her experiences with abuse as a child and denounced war. Sinéad also publicly campaigned for women’s rights and especially the right to abortion in Ireland. Together with musicians from the bands Coldplay, Led Zeppelin, One Direction, Queen, U2, and others, she took part in Bob Geldof’s Band Aid 30 project in 2014 to raise funds to combat the Ebola epidemic in West Africa. The documentary Nothing Compares, about her life and career, directed by Kathryn Ferguson, was released in 2022 and received two British Independent Film Awards (BIFA).

In Sinéad’s final interview in 2023, she discussed how in childhood she realized the power of music and her voice. As she described, “My first musical memory is my father singing to me [the folk ballad] Scarlet ribbons. I just remember being blown away . . . lying on my pillow and my dad singing this song to me. I was like, ‘Oh my God, the angels came in the window.’ My mother was a very violent woman, not a healthy woman; she was physically, verbally, psychologically, spiritually, and emotionally abusive. My mother was a beast. And I was able to soothe her with my voice. I was able to use my voice to make the devil fall asleep.”

Sinéad O’Connor passed away in London on 26 July 2023. Read her obituary in MGG Online and stay tuned for a full article.

Listen to Don’t give up, recording that features O’Connor with Willie Nelson below.

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Filed under Performers, Politics, Popular music, Reception, Uncategorized

Hugo Wolf: Briefe

Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag launched the series Hugo Wolf: Briefe (1873–1901) in 2010 with Briefe 1873–91 (ISBN 978-3-902681-20-1), edited by Leopold Spitzer. The series is being issued in conjunction with the publisher’s complete edition of Wolf’s works.

Above, the composer with the mezzo-soprano Frieda Zerny, possibly holding a letter from him (see Wolf and Zerny, Briefe an Frieda Zerny [Wien: Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag , 1978]).

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Filed under New editions, New series, Romantic era