THE TEXAS TORNADOS


   Hoy me váis a permitir una licencia, nos vamos a pasar algunos pueblecillos de lo que es el BLUES, Rural, raíces, Chicago , Eléctrico armónico y guitarrero que caracteriza a nuestro Blog para ofreceros un poquito de  TEX-MEX.,  ( Pero OJO !! también un pellizquito de Blues , si aguantas hasta el minuto 51.00 de la filmación  ( si no vás directamente a él ) podrás ver y oir una versión majestuosa de BABY WHAT YOU WANT ME TO DO de JIMMY REED .)  Unos verdaderos monstruos de la especialidad, como son TEXAS TORNADOS que reune a cuatro figuras de gran renombre y con un background cada uno de ellos que espanta. Con el TEX-MEX pasa como con tantas otras cosas que ó te gusta o lo odias., sinceramente , a  nosotros nos gusta ,. nos introducimos en el genero a base de seguir al gran FLACO JIMENEZ, que todos conoceréis y desde entonces que ocupa una parte de nuestra discoteca que de vez en cuando nos viene de gusto recordar, como hoy,  que os ofrecemos este sensacional video para uso y disfrute de todo áquel que le guste, al que no lo conozca , igual le atrae....y el que lo odie por supuesto , ya sabéis ..... pasar olímpicamente que aquí no pretendemos sentar cátedras ni conminar a nadie , nada más lejos de la realidad, ponemos lo que a nosotros nos gusta y si en algunas ocasiones coincidimos con el personal que entra a visitar el Blog fenomenal ! 

The Texas Tornados
La banda Texas Tornados reunió a cuatro músicos que cruzaron fronteras étnicas y musicales:

Freddy Fender, de San Benito, quien comenzó como músico de rock ‘n’ roll, luego se fue a Luisiana a dedicarse a su pasión por el rhythm and blues y más tarde se convirtió en una estrella de la música country.
Flaco Jiménez, de San Antonio, hijo del legendario acordeonista Santiago Jiménez Sr., ha interpretado con una variedad de artistas y ha popularizado el acordeón de conjunto entre las audiencias internacionales.
Doug Sahm y Augie Meyers, de San Antonio, crecieron tocando música con músicos tejanos y afroamericanos en el lado oeste.
Dicen los rumores que ellos formaron la banda después de tocar como los “Tex-Mex Revue” en un concierto en San Francisco en los años 1980. En 1990 ganaron un Grammy por “Best Mexican American Performance” con la canción "Soy de San Luis". Su primer álbum Texas Tornados alcanzó el número veinticinco en las listas de Country & Western.   Dos años más tarde, su álbum Hanging on by a Thread alcanzó el número cinco en las listas de Regional Mexican.

                                


Doug Sahm, Freddy Fender, Augie Meyers, Flaco Jimenez, Louie Ortega, Speedy Sparks, Ernie Durawa, Oscar Tellez, and Derek O"Brien   THE TEXAS TORNADOS



Texas Tornados is a Tejano band. Its music is a fusion of rock, country and various Mexican styles.
The initial combination of musicians of the Texas Tornados happened almost by chance at a concert performance of mutual acquaintances. After Freddy Fender, Flaco Jiménez, Augie Meyers, and Doug Sahm performed in front of a San Francisco audience, they all knew the genuine bond they felt in their music could probably be taken to another level. After they initially performed as the Tex-Mex Revue, they took the title Texas Tornados, after Sahm's song and album of that name.

Another account of the group's birth says they formed when record company executives looking to cash in on regional music sales approached Sahm and Meyers around 1990, and they brought in longtime friends and collaborators Fender and Jiménez. Sahm had released albums under the name Texas Tornados as early as the 1970s, some featuring Fender or Meyers. Jiménez and Meyers played on Sahm's Atlantic Records debut in 1971. As Fender once said "You've heard of New Kids on the Block?, we're the Old Guys in the Street".

Individually, this quartet has had major success:

Freddy Fender was a cross-over success story around the world with hits like "Before the Next Teardrop Falls" and "Wasted Days and Wasted Nights".
Flaco Jiménez has played with acts ranging from the Rolling Stones to Dwight Yoakam. He also is known as the "Father of Conjunto Music" (Flaco plays the Conjunto accordion).
Augie Meyers has shared the stage with the likes of The Allman Brothers Band and Bob Dylan. He's also a member of the Texas Music Hall of Fame.
Doug Sahm and Augie Meyers were both members of the 1960s pop-rock band the Sir Douglas Quintet, with hits such as "She's About a Mover" and "Mendocino" to their credit. Meyers' signature sound on the Vox organ was a prominent feature of the band's sound. Sahm, Meyers and Jiménez are from the San Antonio area.
The band's 1990 debut was recorded in both English and Spanish versions. The Texas Tornados were asked to perform all over the world at places like the Presidential Inauguration of Bill Clinton, the Montreux Jazz Festival, as well as regular appearances at Farm Aid and the Houston Livestock and Rodeo Show. They won a Grammy Award in 1990 for "Best Mexican/American Performance." Their 1996 single "A Little Bit is Better Than Nada" accompanied the opening credits of the golf movie Tin Cup, which was released the same year, and is included in the official soundtrack.

Among their other albums is Live From The Limo, this was the last album to be recorded that featured the complete lineup, as Sahm died in 1999, the year of its release. Fender, who had health problems in later years, died in 2006. Their 2005 Live from Austin album was a recording of a 1990 performance on the TV series Austin City Limits.

People sometimes refer to their lyrics as Spanglish because of the mixture of English and Spanish in the same song, in addition to pronouncing the Spanish lyrics in an American accent, which is evident in their hit, "(Hey Baby) Que Paso". An example is the lyric: "Don't you know I love you / and my corazón is real?", where the word corazón (Spanish for "heart") is improperly pronounced /ˌkɔrəˈsoʊn/, with an obvious American accent, instead of [koɾaˈson]. The band's self-titled debut album was offered in Spanish and English-language versions.

2010 - Esta Bueno![edit]
Augie Meyers and Flaco Jiménez reunited with the son of Doug Sahm, Shawn Sahm in a new recording that includes five previously unreleased vocal performances from the legendary Freddy Fender. The collection, entitled “Esta Bueno,” includes new songs written by Fender such as the swamp pop ballad “If I Could Only,” an instant new Tornados-style classic written by Doug and Shawn Sahm “Who’s to Blame, Señorita?” and several Augie Meyers songs recorded for the first time by the Tornados, such as “Velma from Selma” and “My Sugar Blue.” The album was produced by Shawn Sahm and was released nationally by Ray Benson's Bismeaux Records on March 2, 2010.

Playing together again for the first time since the ‘90s and feeling what Shawn calls “the Tornado vibe,” the group enlisted Shawn to take over and “drive the bus” for their first album in over a decade. His goal for the record was “to keep it a straight up Tex-Mex rock and roll record.” When they first began recording, Shawn was very pleased but not surprised to hear them “sounding like they are playing at the top of their game.” He states, “When you hear this record, you hear why they are the legends they are.”

Shawn Sahm has been around the music since he was 13 and was the perfect person to entrust with preserving the Tornados' legacy. He fine-tuned each track according to the group’s feedback giving each detail serious attention. Throughout the process, he insisted to all of them, “It is not done until you are happy.” For the release of the album, Ray Benson’s label, Bismeaux Records in Austin, was an obvious choice. Shawn comments, “Everyone knew they had a great record and they felt it would be important to go with someone who understood the legacy of the Texas Tornados. I knew Ray was the right guy. They have been friends for a long time. If anyone understood the legacy of the band, it was Ray.”

“Having known the original Texas Tornados, I was delighted when Shawn brought me the tracks of the NEW Texas Tornados CD,” said Ray Benson. “Besides the wonderful Freddy Fender songs recorded shortly before his passing, Augie, Flaco and Shawn have recorded an album true to the Tornados sound and vision. I am honored to present their CD on Bismeaux Records for old fans and I am sure a host of new ones, too.”

In addition to the featured members, the recordings include Tornado original musicians Louie Ortega, Speedy Sparks and Ernie Durawa. Flaco Jiménez states, “The groove is back.”




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