David Hidalgo: Difference between revisions
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'''David Kent Hidalgo''' (born October 6, 1954, in Los Angeles<ref>Holly George-Warren, editor. ''The Rolling stone encyclopedia of rock & roll''. Fireside (2001), p. 579. {{ISBN|0-7432-0120-5}}.</ref>) is an American singer-songwriter, best known for his work with the band [[Los Lobos]]. In 1973, Hidalgo was one of the founding members of Los Lobos, for which he wrote most songs together with Louie Pérez. Otherwise, he also participated as a guest musician on albums of other artists, including David Alvin, Buckwheat Zydeco, Paul Burlison, T-Bone Burnett, Peter Case, Toni Childs, Marc Cohn, Ry Cooder, Elvis Costello, Crowded House, The Fabulous Thunderbirds, John Lee Hooker, Rickie Lee Jones, Leo Kottke, Roy Orbison, Dolly Parton, Pierce Pettis, Bonnie Raitt, Paul Simon, Taj Mahal, Suzanne Vega, Bob Dylan und Tom Waits. He is also a member of the [[supergroup (music)|supergroup]] [[Los Super Seven]] and of the [[Latin Playboys]], a side project made up of some of the members of Los Lobos. With Mike Halby of [[Canned Heat]], he formed another band, Houndog, as a side project. He also appeared on national television in the U.S., backing [[Tom Waits]]. |
'''David Kent Hidalgo''' (born October 6, 1954, in Los Angeles<ref>Holly George-Warren, editor. ''The Rolling stone encyclopedia of rock & roll''. Fireside (2001), p. 579. {{ISBN|0-7432-0120-5}}.</ref>) is an American singer-songwriter, best known for his work with the band [[Los Lobos]]. |
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In 1973, Hidalgo was one of the founding members of Los Lobos, for which he wrote most songs together with Louie Pérez. Otherwise, he also participated as a guest musician on albums of other artists, including David Alvin, Buckwheat Zydeco, Paul Burlison, T-Bone Burnett, Peter Case, Toni Childs, Marc Cohn, Ry Cooder, Elvis Costello, Crowded House, The Fabulous Thunderbirds, John Lee Hooker, Rickie Lee Jones, Leo Kottke, Roy Orbison, Dolly Parton, Pierce Pettis, Bonnie Raitt, Paul Simon, Taj Mahal, Suzanne Vega, Bob Dylan und Tom Waits. He is also a member of the [[supergroup (music)|supergroup]] [[Los Super Seven]] and of the [[Latin Playboys]], a side project made up of some of the members of Los Lobos. With Mike Halby of [[Canned Heat]], he formed another band, Houndog, as a side project. He also appeared on national television in the U.S., backing [[Tom Waits]]. |
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For the movie Promised Land he contributed in 1987 the song Will the Wolf Survive. For Dennis Hopper's film drama Colors - Colors of Violence with Sean Penn and Robert Duvall from 1988, he wrote the song One Time, One Night. The songs Manifold De Amour, Forever Night Shade Mary and Chinese Surprize for the 1995 action film Desperado with Antonio Banderas and Salma Hayek are also from Hidalgo's pen. For the road movie The Mexican with Brad Pitt and Julia Roberts from 2001 he wrote the melancholic song La pistola y el corazón. |
For the movie Promised Land he contributed in 1987 the song Will the Wolf Survive. For Dennis Hopper's film drama Colors - Colors of Violence with Sean Penn and Robert Duvall from 1988, he wrote the song One Time, One Night. The songs Manifold De Amour, Forever Night Shade Mary and Chinese Surprize for the 1995 action film Desperado with Antonio Banderas and Salma Hayek are also from Hidalgo's pen. For the road movie The Mexican with Brad Pitt and Julia Roberts from 2001 he wrote the melancholic song La pistola y el corazón. |
Revision as of 15:05, 2 September 2019
David Hidalgo | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | David Kent Hidalgo |
Born | Los Angeles, California, United States | October 6, 1954
Genres | Chicano rock, roots rock, Tex-Mex, Americana, cowpunk |
Occupation(s) | Musician, songwriter |
Instrument(s) | Vocals, accordion, violin, 6-string banjo, cello, requinto jarocho, percussion, drums, guitar |
David Kent Hidalgo (born October 6, 1954, in Los Angeles[1]) is an American singer-songwriter, best known for his work with the band Los Lobos.
In 1973, Hidalgo was one of the founding members of Los Lobos, for which he wrote most songs together with Louie Pérez. Otherwise, he also participated as a guest musician on albums of other artists, including David Alvin, Buckwheat Zydeco, Paul Burlison, T-Bone Burnett, Peter Case, Toni Childs, Marc Cohn, Ry Cooder, Elvis Costello, Crowded House, The Fabulous Thunderbirds, John Lee Hooker, Rickie Lee Jones, Leo Kottke, Roy Orbison, Dolly Parton, Pierce Pettis, Bonnie Raitt, Paul Simon, Taj Mahal, Suzanne Vega, Bob Dylan und Tom Waits. He is also a member of the supergroup Los Super Seven and of the Latin Playboys, a side project made up of some of the members of Los Lobos. With Mike Halby of Canned Heat, he formed another band, Houndog, as a side project. He also appeared on national television in the U.S., backing Tom Waits.
For the movie Promised Land he contributed in 1987 the song Will the Wolf Survive. For Dennis Hopper's film drama Colors - Colors of Violence with Sean Penn and Robert Duvall from 1988, he wrote the song One Time, One Night. The songs Manifold De Amour, Forever Night Shade Mary and Chinese Surprize for the 1995 action film Desperado with Antonio Banderas and Salma Hayek are also from Hidalgo's pen. For the road movie The Mexican with Brad Pitt and Julia Roberts from 2001 he wrote the melancholic song La pistola y el corazón.
Hidalgo's songs have been covered by the Jerry Garcia Band, Waylon Jennings, Bonnie Raitt and others. He has performed in Eric Clapton's Crossroads Guitar Festival since its inception in 2004, most recently in April 2013 at Madison Square Garden with Los Lobos. Eric Clapton joined the band on stage for their song "Burn It Down", from their latest album, Tin Can Trust. His son, David Hidalgo Jr., is the current drummer for Social Distortion.
In addition to his work with Los Lobos, Hidalgo frequently plays musical instruments such as accordion, violin, 6-string banjo, cello, requinto jarocho, percussion, drums and guitar as a session musician on other artists' releases.
Discography
Selected collaborations
- Eric Clapton (Crossroads festival DVD, CD)
- Buckwheat Zydeco (multiple projects),
- T-Bone Burnett (guitar, accordion, vocals, 8-String Bass on T-Bone Burnett (1986))
- Peter Case (The Man with the Blue Post Modern Fragmented Neo-Traditionalist Guitar)
- Elvis Costello (harmony vocal on King of America, guitar and harmony vocal on Momofuku)
- Crowded House (accordion "As Sure as I Am" on Woodface (1991))
- John Lee Hooker (multiple projects)
- Roy Orbison (King of Hearts)
- Willy DeVille (Backstreets of Desire, Crow Jane Alley)
- Ozomatli (multiple projects)
- Dolly Parton (Treasures)
- Pierce Pettis (Chase the Buffalo)
- Paul Simon ("All Around the World or The Myth of Fingerprints" on Graceland (1986))
- Marc Ribot (Border Music)
- Tonio K. (Olé)
- Tremoloco (Dulcinea)
- Suzanne Vega (99.9 °F)
- Tom Waits (accordion on "Cold, Cold Ground" and "Train Song" on Frank's Wild Years (1987); accordion and violin on "Whistle Down the Wind" on Bone Machine (1992); guitar, accordion, violin, bass, backing vocals on several tracks on Bad As Me (2011))
- The 1994 tribute to songwriter Mark Heard, Strong Hand of Love
- Leo Kottke (Try and Stop Me)
- Gov't Mule (Politician) (guitar and vocals on The Deepest End, Live in Concert)
- Bob Dylan (accordion on Together Through Life and Christmas in the Heart; guitar, accordion, violin on Tempest)
- G. Love & Special Sauce (viola on "Missing My Baby")
- Los Cenzontles (co-producer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist on Songs of Wood & Steel)
- Taj Mahal & Los Cenzontles (co-producer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist on "American Horizon")
- Mato Nanji, Luther Dickinson (3 Skulls and the Truth, Blues Bureau International)
DVDs
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Music videos
Year | Video |
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1990 | "Hey Good Lookin'" (with Buckwheat Zydeco and Dwight Yoakam) |
References
- ^ Holly George-Warren, editor. The Rolling stone encyclopedia of rock & roll. Fireside (2001), p. 579. ISBN 0-7432-0120-5.
External links
- 1954 births
- Living people
- American male singers
- Songwriters from Arizona
- American session musicians
- American musicians of Mexican descent
- Hispanic and Latino American musicians
- Singers from Los Angeles
- Los Lobos members
- Spanish-language singers of the United States
- Songwriters from California
- Singers from Arizona
- Latin Playboys members
- 21st-century accordionists
- 21st-century male musicians