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Jorge
Negrete/Pedro Infante
Par De Ases De La Musica
Ranchera (CD - 2008)
Monday August 04, 2008 4:00pm
EST

The
first nationally famous
ranchera singer, Jorge Negrete
appeared in three dozen
films and recorded almost
200 songs during the 1930s,
'40s, and early '50s, before
dying at the height of his
career. Born into a military
family (his father earned
the rank of lieutenant colonel
in the Mexican Army during
the revolution), Negrete
initially followed in his
father's footsteps, enrolling
in Heroico Colegio Militar
(his country's West Point)
in 1925 and joining the
army three years later.
In addition to the military,
Negrete was also interested
in music; he studied voice
with Jose Pierson and became
a talented opera singer
(at one time, New York's
Metropolitan Opera House
offered him a secondary
position). When hired by
radio station XEW in 1930,
however, he struggled to
make the transition from
opera to the more commercial
ranchera style. After four
years of development and
growing acclaim, Negrete
made a trip to New York
to perform and was promptly
hired by NBC.
His career exploded during
his brief stay in America;
he collaborated with Xavier
Cugat, earned bookings at
Latin clubs, met his first
wife (dancer Elisa Christy),
and connected with cinematographer
Ramon Peon, who cast Negrete
in his first film, 1937's
La Madrina del Diablo. Four
years later, Ay Jalisco,
No Te Rajes! assured his
fame as "El Charro
Cantor," the singing
cowboy. He made 38 films
in all and recorded several
huge hits, including "Paloma
Querida," "El
Hijo del Pueblo," "Tequila
con Limon," and the
patriotic anthems "Mexico
Lindo y Querido" and
"Yo Soy Mexicano."
During the early '50s, Negrete
worked with Pedro Infante,
one of his main ranchera
rivals, in Dos Tipos de
Cuidado, and wed another
film star, Maria Felix,
in a marriage that Mexicans
dubbed "the wedding
of the century" (Felix's
first appearance was in
a Negrete film). One year
later, he was dead from
cirrhosis, not caused by
alcoholism but hepatitis.
* John Bush, All Music Guide
TRACK
LISTING
1. Amorcito Corazon
2. Yo Soy Mexicano
3. El Gavilan Pollero
4. Ojos Tapatios
5. Flor Sin Retono
6. Asi Se Quiere En Jalisco
7. Chen Anos
8. Cocula
9. Mi Carinito
10. Flor De Azalea
11. Cuando Sale La Luna
12. Peregrina
13. Yo Soy Quien Soy (Con
Banda El Recodo)
14. La Nortena
15. Muy Despacito
16. Aunque Lo Quieran O
No
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