Banda superbandido biography

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COLUMN ONE : Dancing Away From Trouble : Some youths have left gangs in favor of clubs devoted to <i> banda </i> music. Their parties can spark problems, police say, but the craze is viewed as an alternative to violence.

Four beefy guys with ponytails and tattoos strut through the crowd at a South-Central Los Angeles party.

They confront three other guys wearing baseball caps airbrushed with words such as machos and maldito. Without speaking, each side flashes signs--indicating who they are and where they’re from. Speaking with their hands, they twist their fingers and rapidly open and close their fists--often a signal that a gang fight is imminent.

But these youths are throwing club signs, symbolizing their allegiance to the quebradita dance clubs for which they have abandoned their gangs.

The clubs, whose members are united by a passion for dancing to Mexican banda music, have helped steer youths from gangs and have the potential for keeping more off the streets, say police, school officials and former gang members.

“What I’ve seen is something un

Bandido (supergroup)

New Mexico music supergroup

Bandido were a New Mexico musicsupergroup that released several albums during the 1980s.[1] They released three studio albums, and a compilation album. All of their releases charted along the west coast, Chicago, and internationally in Germany, Venezuela, and Spain.[2]

Their frontman Al Hurricane, as well as his son Al Hurricane Jr., spoke fondly of their time with the band but reiterated their desire to return to their New Mexico music audience; as they felt that Bandido's sound was more akin to Latin music.[1][2] The three Bandido albums comprise Al Hurricane's twelfth, fourteenth, and fifteenth albums.[2] Between the first and second Bandido releases Al Hurricane Sr. and Jr. released 15 Exitos Rancheros alongside Tiny Morrie.[3]

Albums

Bandido's first release (track listing)

Title
1."Si Volviera Ese Amor" 
2."Nada Va Bien" 
3."No Me Lo Vas A Creer" 
4."Ya No Me Interesa" 
5."Seis Rosas Ama

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