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$3.50The Story
With the rise of Latino music, the greatest Tex-Mex country and pop star in history is again gaining well-deserved attention--Freddy Fender. His induction into the Tejano Music Hall Of Fame in 1987 and a 1990 Grammy for Best Mexican/American Performance with the Texas Tornados are among the recent highlights in Freddyâs career. But it is his music of the â70s, often sung in both English and Spanish, which inspired succeeding generations and will forever have a place in music history. All of his biggest hits are heard on The Best Of Freddy Fender (MCA Nashville/UME) edition of 20th Century Masters/The Millennium Collection, released April 24, 2001. Featuring 12 digitally remastered selections, the album brings together 11 country Top 20 singles, eight of them Top 10, including such signature songs as âBefore The Next Teardrop Fallsâ and âWasted Days And Wasted Nights,â both of which were also pop Top 10. Baldemar Huerta grew up in the Rio Grande Valley, southernmost Texas, just across the border from Mexico. A migrant farm worker alongside his parents, he joined the Marines at 16 but too often landed in the brig and was discharged. In the late â50s, he began playing rockabilly in local honky tonks and dance halls. An early record, a Spanish version of Elvisâ âDonât Be Cruel,â went to #1 in Latin America. But it was as Freddy Fender--âFenderâ came from the neck of his guitar--that his âWasted Days And Wasted Nightsâ became a minor hit in 1960. He could relate all too well to the lyrics: That year he was arrested for possession of marijuana. After three years in Louisianaâs Angola State Prison and a gig in New Orleans, in 1969 he returned to the Valley to attend community college, work as a mechanic and play weekends. His break came when producer Huey P. Meaux suggested Freddy record âBefore The Next Teardrop Falls.â The song reached #1 pop and country, and was the Country Music Associationâs Single of the Year. A re-recorded âWasted Days And Wasted Nightsâ then hit #1 country/Top 10 pop. âSecret Loveâ went #1 country/Top 20 pop, followed by another country #1 (Top 40 pop), âYouâll Lose A Good Thing.â The Academy of Country Music named him its Most Promising Male Vocalist of 1975 and Billboard its Best Male Artist of 1975. He also hit Top 10 country with âLiving It Down,â âThe Rains Came,â âSugar Coated Loveâ and one of the finest examples of his heartbreaking interpretations, âVaya Con Dios.â The Best Of Freddy Fender also includes the country Top 20s âIf You Donât Love Me (Why Donât You Just Leave Me Alone),â âThink About Meâ and âTalk To Me.â Appropriately, The Best Of Freddy Fender concludes with âI Love My Rancho Grande.â His success in coming home to his roots has never been wasted on the original Tex-Mex superstar.
Description
With the rise of Latino music, the greatest Tex-Mex country and pop star in history is again gaining well-deserved attention--Freddy Fender. His induction into the Tejano Music Hall Of Fame in 1987 and a 1990 Grammy for Best Mexican/American Performance with the Texas Tornados are among the recent highlights in Freddyâs career. But it is his music of the â70s, often sung in both English and Spanish, which inspired succeeding generations and will forever have a place in music history. All of his biggest hits are heard on The Best Of Freddy Fender (MCA Nashville/UME) edition of 20th Century Masters/The Millennium Collection, released April 24, 2001. Featuring 12 digitally remastered selections, the album brings together 11 country Top 20 singles, eight of them Top 10, including such signature songs as âBefore The Next Teardrop Fallsâ and âWasted Days And Wasted Nights,â both of which were also pop Top 10. Baldemar Huerta grew up in the Rio Grande Valley, southernmost Texas, just across the border from Mexico. A migrant farm worker alongside his parents, he joined the Marines at 16 but too often landed in the brig and was discharged. In the late â50s, he began playing rockabilly in local honky tonks and dance halls. An early record, a Spanish version of Elvisâ âDonât Be Cruel,â went to #1 in Latin America. But it was as Freddy Fender--âFenderâ came from the neck of his guitar--that his âWasted Days And Wasted Nightsâ became a minor hit in 1960. He could relate all too well to the lyrics: That year he was arrested for possession of marijuana. After three years in Louisianaâs Angola State Prison and a gig in New Orleans, in 1969 he returned to the Valley to attend community college, work as a mechanic and play weekends. His break came when producer Huey P. Meaux suggested Freddy record âBefore The Next Teardrop Falls.â The song reached #1 pop and country, and was the Country Music Associationâs Single of the Year. A re-recorded âWasted Days And Wasted Nightsâ then hit #1 country/Top 10 pop. âSecret Loveâ went #1 country/Top 20 pop, followed by another country #1 (Top 40 pop), âYouâll Lose A Good Thing.â The Academy of Country Music named him its Most Promising Male Vocalist of 1975 and Billboard its Best Male Artist of 1975. He also hit Top 10 country with âLiving It Down,â âThe Rains Came,â âSugar Coated Loveâ and one of the finest examples of his heartbreaking interpretations, âVaya Con Dios.â The Best Of Freddy Fender also includes the country Top 20s âIf You Donât Love Me (Why Donât You Just Leave Me Alone),â âThink About Meâ and âTalk To Me.â Appropriately, The Best Of Freddy Fender concludes with âI Love My Rancho Grande.â His success in coming home to his roots has never been wasted on the original Tex-Mex superstar.











