Categories:
Cart 0

Your cart is empty

Flaco Jimenez

No single artist did more to popularize conjunto and Tejano music than Flaco Jimenéz, the master accordion player who received an unprecidented level of critical acclaim. Over the course of a career that spanned six decades, Jimenéz took the accordion-fueled Tex-Mex sound to a worldwide audience. Without compromising his musical vision, Jimenéz introduced the traditional conjunto sound to mainstream pop and country listeners thanks to his collaborations with the Texas Tornados, Dwight Yoakam, and the Mavericks, and he was celebrated by adventurous rock fans through his work with Ry Cooder, Carlos Santana, Doug Sahm, and the Rolling Stones. 1985's Ay Te Dejo en San Antonio y Más! was a Grammy-winning sampling of his early recordings, 1992's Partners included a number of guest appearances from famous friends and admirers, and 2003's Squeeze Box King was a powerful and ecclectic celebration of border music.Flaco Jimenéz was born in San Antonio, Texas in 1939, and raised in a musical family; his grandfather Patricio Jimenéz was an accordion player who embraced the polkas and waltz tunes that are conjunto's stylistic precursors, and Flaco's father, Santiago Jimenéz, Sr., was a pioneering Tex-Mex musician who cut one of the first conjunto records, "Dices Pescao" b/w "Dispensa el Arrempujon," in 1936. Flaco's first instrument was the bajo sexto (a Mexican variation on the 12-string guitar), which he started to play at age seven, but after he became proficient enough to join his father on-stage, Flaco's interest turned to the accordion, and he developed a joyous, expressive style that was influenced by zydeco master Clifton Chenier as well as his father and his Tex-Mex peers. At 15, Jimenéz formed his first band, Los Caporales, and the group soon won a sizable following in San Antonio, cutting records for a local label and earning a weekly spot on a local television variety show. By the early '60s, Jimenéz was already a Texas legend, playing clubs across the Lone Star State and regularly filling dancehalls in San Antonio with music that fused the classic Tejano sound with elements of blues and country. Jimenéz gained a loyal fan in Doug Sahm, founder of the Sir Douglas Quintet and a fellow Texas maverick with a taste for crossbreeding rootsy sounds, and in 1973, when Sahm was recording his first solo album for Atlantic Records, he invited Flaco to join him for the sessions (which also included guest spots from Bob Dylan and Dr. John), giving him his first serious recognition outside of the Tejano scene. In 1976, Ry Cooder included Flaco on his album Chicken Skin Music, and the groundbreaking folk and roots music label Arhoolie Records released Flaco Jimenéz & His Conjunto in 1978, finally giving his own music distribution outside of the Southwest. Jimenéz continued to record and tour extensively, broadening his reach across the country and around the world, and in 1988 Dwight Yoakam brought Flaco into the studio to add an accordion part to a duet he recorded with Buck Owens. The tune, "Streets of Bakersfield," became a major country hit, and as Flaco joined Yoakam on tour, he found himself a rising star at the age of 49. In 1989, Jimenéz and his old friend Doug Sahm teamed up for a new project with country legend Freddy Fender and fellow squeezebox man (and one of Sahm's partners in the Sir Douglas Quintet) Augie Meyers; calling themselves the Texas Tornados, the band scored a deal with Reprise Records and they hit the charts with a re-cut of Meyers local hit "(Hey Baby) Que Paso." A track from the Texas Tornados' debut album, "Soy de San Luis," won a Grammy as Best Mexican-American Performance of 1991, and it would be the first of five Grammys Flaco would receive before the decade was out. Now that Flaco was a bona fide star, he signed with Warner Bros. and released a 1992 solo set, Partners, which included guest appearances from Linda Ronstadt, Emmylou Harris, and Los Lobos. In 1994, the Rolling Stones tapped Flaco to add an accordion solo to their album Voodoo Lounge, and the same year Jimenéz released a self-titled solo set for Arista, a rootsy effort that included vocals from Raul Malo of the Mavericks. A year later, Jimenéz and Malo appeared on record together again when Flaco added a hot accordion solo to the Mavericks' "All You Ever Do Is Bring Me Down" from their album Music for All Occasions, which once again brought Flaco's sound to the upper reaches of the country charts. The last studio album from the Texas Tornados was released in 1996, the same year Jimenéz delivered a second LP for Arista, Buena Suerte Senorita, but Jimenéz joined up with another supergroup in 1998, Los Super Seven, a collection of top Latin-American musicians, including members of Los Lobos, as well as Joe Ely. Jimenéz also brought out a solo album in 1988, Said and Done, for Virgin Records.Jimenéz was back in the studio for 2000's Sleepytown, which featured guest spots from Buck Owens, Doug Sahm, and Dwight Yoakam and included a Tex-Mex reworking of the Beatles' "Love Me Do." 2003's Squeeze Box King featured his usual blend of boleros, rancheras, and polkas, as well as some detours into Afro/Cuban rhythms. Jimenéz and his Texas Tornados partner Freddy Fender cut a live-in-the-studio session, Dos Amigos, in 2005, the same year he guested on albums by Tish Hinojosa, Ry Cooder, and Billy Joe Shaver, and appeared on a second Los Super Seven LP, Heard It On the X. An ad-hoc band of Tex-Mex and Latin music notables -- including members of Los Lobos and the Texas Tornados -- called Los Texmaniacs recruited Jimenéz for their 2006 album Tex-Mex Groove, and later that year, he contributed to the score of Tommy Lee Jones' award-winning film The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada. Jimenéz was part of the studio band for Tanya Tucker's fine 2009 album My Turn, and in 2010, he recorded an album with a revived edition of the Texas Tornados, ¡Está Bueno!, led by Shawn Sahm, son of the late Doug Sahm. Ry Cooder's 2011 album Pick Up Some Dust and Sit Down once again included Jimenéz's accordion work, and bajo sexto virtuosos Max Baca, who worked with Flaco on the Los Texmaniacs album, teamed with him for a duo project, 2014's Flaco & Max: Legends and Legacies. A compilation, The Complete Arista Recordings, was released in the late summer of 2015, followed by a reissue of the independently released Con Sus Amigos a year later. In 2017, Jimenéz collaborated with Los Cenzontles and Los Texmaniacs on the studio album Carta Jugada. In 2020, the Mavericks released En Español, which as the title suggested was a collection of songs in Spanish, and they naturally invited their old friend Flaco to sit in on the sessions. It was one of his last recording projects as he entered a period of ill health, though he continued to make an annual appearance at San Antonio's Tejano-Conjunto Festival. Flaco Jimenéz was staying at the home of one of his children when he died on July 31, 2025 at the age of 86.
© Mark Deming /TiVo

Discography

61 album(s) • Sorted by Bestseller

My favourites

Cet élément a bien été <span>ajouté / retiré</span> de vos favoris.

Sort and filter releases