Avenida Resolucion
- Share via
Corn tortillas flew like Frisbees into the ring, showering the competitors in a faux bout of lucha libre--Mexican wrestling--at a recent art opening in downtown Los Angeles.
Watching from the sidelines, Luis Guerena, singer of influential punk en espanol band Tijuana No!, could not let the moment pass.
“Don’t you realize that there are people outside of these gates begging for food?” the enraged punkero shouted to the mostly Mexican American audience gathered for the exhibit of lucha libre-inspired art. “Have you forgotten your roots? Your families left Mexico because they didn’t have enough money to buy a tortilla!”
Tijuana No! is the most fiercely political of all Mexican rock bands; its name protests the flight of Mexicans to the United States via their Baja California city.
“We see ourselves as an extension of the voice for the poor and the disadvantaged,” said Teca Garcia, the band’s percussionist and Latin folkloric music specialist.
To deliver their message, the versatile sextet uses a potent hybrid of Afro-Latin folk-punk that bounces from reggae to hard core, world beat to ska--layered with scratchy male and sultry female vocals.
Now, with two critically acclaimed albums in the Latin market on the BMG label and a third on its way, the band wonders if mainstream American audiences will say si to the Tijuana No! sound.
“We think it’s important that as many people as possible listen to our music,” said Guerena, the band’s primary songwriter, over Chinese takeout in Hollywood during a break from mixing songs for “Contra-Revolution Avenue,” the band’s next CD.
Tijuana No! hopes to accomplish the coveted crossover, and toward that end the border band will open Saturday for one of its musical models, 2-Tone giants the Specials, at the Galaxy Concert Theatre in Santa Ana.
“It’s an honor to share the stage with a legendary group that has been such an influence on us,” said the colorful Guerena, a driving force of the Tijuana punk scene.
With their provocative lyrics--sung in Spanish, English and Spanglish--and stage magnetism, it’s no wonder Tijuana No! grabbed the Specials’ attention as they played alongside another legendary ska band, the Selecter, at a recent San Diego performance.
*
Joining Guerena, 38, and Garcia are Ceci Bastida, vocals and keyboards; Jorge “Borja” Velasquez, bass; Jorge Jimenez, guitar; and Alex Zuniga, drums. The 7-year-old collective started as a group of friends with shared ideals. Guerena met Zuniga about a decade ago at a fund-raiser (featuring Black Flag) Guerena had helped organize for rebels in El Salvador and Nicaragua. Today, the band sings about the Zapatista and Tupac Amaru guerrilla movements in Mexico and Peru, respectively.
“Contra-Revolution Avenue,” a play on the name of Tijuana’s commercial strip Avenida Revolucion (an oxymoron, the band members say), includes tracks with Rasta-punk legend H.R. of Bad Brains, Breeder Kim Deal, Latino hip-hop pioneer Kid Frost and Fishbone’s Angelo Moore.
“An important characteristic of Tijuana No! is that we are spontaneous,” said Garcia, whose long black hair looks tame next to Guerena’s spiked green locks. “While we were waiting for Zack de la Rocha [of Rage Against the Machine] to produce our album, we made calls to everyone we knew. Whoever showed up made it on the record.”
*
De la Rocha, who hails from Orange County, never made it. But other contributors abound on the new album. Deal and Bastida pair up for a grungy, bilingual duet. Moore sings and plays his sax and the space-age, violin-like Theremin. H.R. offers backup vocals, as does Fermin Muguruza of Negu Gorriak, a Basque tropical-punk band with a separatist political agenda.
In a departure from his mellow style, Frost aggressively raps with Guerena in “Stolen at Gunpoint,” a song about U.S. land acquisitions throughout Mexico’s history.
“Tijuana No! has always been versatile, always experimenting and putting everything we knew musically into our sound,” Guerena said. “Until the quality of life for the underclass improves around the world, we will always sing about political awareness.”
* Tijuana No! opens Saturday for the Specials at the Galaxy Concert Theatre, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana. 8 p.m. Tickets are $15. (714) 957-0600.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.