Similarly to country and sertanejo music, artists of regional Mexican subgenres are often characterized by their use of Western wear and denim clothing.[5]
History
16th century - 20th century: Origins
Many different subgenres of regional Mexican have their origins in the 16th to 18th centuries. Indigenous, African, and Spanish instruments and styles mixed together to create these genres of music.[6] For example, mariachi originated in the state of Jalisco around the 18th century.[7] The mariachi genre is distinguished by its use of the vihuela, guitarrón, trumpet, and violin.[8]
Other genres developed later in the 20th century. An example being the ranchera. Ranchera is a traditional style of regional Mexican formed during the Mexican Revolution.[9] Today, it can be performed in the vast majority of regional Mexican subgenres in several different time signatures.
1940s - 1960s: Rise of Mariachi
The popularity of regional Mexican music, increased internationally from the 1940s to 1960s with the addition of the many regional Mexican soundtracks used in films.[3]Pedro Infante was one of many who helped popularize the genre in the 1950s during the Golden Age of Mexican Cinema.[10] Regional Mexican boleros, specifically boleros accompanied with mariachi, were also popular around this time. Beginning in the 1940s, regional Mexican music gained popularity in Chile through the use of radio and television.
1970s – 1980s: Popularity of Mariachi
In the 1970s, the mariachi genre and ranchera style began to increasingly spread into the United States. Many popular mariachi singers during this time include Vicente Fernández and Antonio Aguilar.
In the 1990s, various subgenres of regional Mexican music remained popular and gained popularity all over Mexico and the United States.
The grupero genre became one of the most popular regional Mexican genres in the United States due to its unique use of electric guitars, keyboard, and drums.[13] Popular bands in the genre included Los Bukis, Los Temerarios, and Bronco. Other regional Mexican acts like American singer Selena were known for fusing the style with Tejano music. Tejano music soon became the most prominent in the genre and one of the fastest-growing music genres in the United States. The "Golden Age of Tejano" is considered to have ended March 31, 1995, when Selena was shot and killed.[14] Selena's music led to the genre's revival and made it marketable in the U.S. for the first time.
In the 2000s, established regional Mexican artists continued to release music including California-based norteño band Los Tigres de Norte, a band that has released music since the 1970s.[20][21] That same decade, some new regional Mexican groups were formed, including Sinaloan banda group Banda MS. Valentín Elizalde, a regional Mexican artist who made corridos was shot after a performance in Mexico in 2006.[22]
In the 2010s, regional Mexican music continued to be pioneered, although it remained less popular than decades before. Norteño-Banda, also known as norteño with tuba, had its most successful run during the early to mid 2010s[27] with artists such as Larry Hernández, Gerardo Ortíz, Calibre 50, and Voz de Mando. Mexican singer-songwriter Ariel Camacho led the sierreño style with Los Plebes del Rancho. Camacho would go on to inspire many other later regional Mexican artists before and after his death in 2015.[3][28]
In 2017, Mexican singer Christian Nodal charted on the Regional Mexican and Latin Billboard charts in the United States with his single "Adiós Amor".[29] Nodal is known for his fusion of mariachi and norteño music.[30] In 2019, norteño band Los Tucanes de Tijuana became Coachella's first norteño act.[31] Another norteño band, Los Tigres de Norte broke the record of paid attendance for a Rodeo Houston show on March 10, 2019, with 75,586 concert tickets sold.[32][33]
2020s: Global Resurgence
In the early 2020s, the regional Mexican genre had a global resurgence steadily topping charts and becoming more listened to. According to Spotify in 2022, Mexican music streams more than doubled since 2019 to reach 5.6 billion.[34] The format had 150 U.S. radio stations.[35] Some of the most listened to regional Mexican artists in the 2020s include Peso Pluma, Natanael Cano, Junior H, Grupo Frontera, Banda MS, Iván Cornejo, and Grupo Firme.[4] Many regional Mexican artists reached millions of streams and high chart success including Peso Pluma[36] whose song with Eslabon Armando titled "Ella Baila Sola" reached No. 4 on the U.S.'s Billboard's mainstream pop chart, the Hot 100. In 2023, Peso Pluma had 24 songs enter the Hot 100.[37] Popular genres of these new artists include corridos tumbados, or trap corridos.[38][39] In 2022, Yahritza Martinez of Yahritza y su Esencia, became the youngest Latin artist to enter the Hot 100 at the age of 15.[40][41] In 2023, artists of other Latin music genres including Bad Bunny, Becky G, and Shakira released songs and albums with regional Mexican music.[3][42][43]
In February 2024, Carín León, who is known to incorporate country music influence into several of his songs,[44] became the first regional Mexican artist to perform in one of country music's most prestigious venues, the Grand Ole Opry.[45] Later, in April of that year, he became the first regional Mexican artist to perform in both the Coachella and Stagecoach music festivals within the same year.[46][47]
Mass media
Uforia Audio Network owns a number of stations running the regional Mexican format.[1] Television channels Bandamax and Video Rola are dedicated to transmitting programming relating mainly to the regional Mexican genre. In Mexico, there are many radio stations solely dedicated to regional Mexican music and some with certain subgenres. Regional Mexican stations are available in the U.S. mostly targeting the Mexican American population.
^Brenner, Helmut; Stanford, Thomas (1996). Música ranchera: das mexikanische Äquivalent zur country and Western music aus historischer, musikalischer und kommerzieller Sicht. Musikethnologische Sammelbände. Tutzing: H. Schneider. ISBN978-3-7952-0867-7.
^Orth, Jesse (August 2015). Tubas on the Rise: the Tuba As a Signifier of 21st Century Mexican-American Music Culture in Southern California. Denton, Texas: University of North Texas.