I moved to DFW in '86 and there was basically no Tejano radio stations here, at least that I could find on FM. So I lived off my cassettes until '95 when Pancho Pistolas bought FM 99.1 (not sure if he was the owner, but he seemed to be the mero-mero DJ). That's when I caught up with la onda, like Hometown Boys, Garcia Brothers, and even Selena. I didn't even know who Selena was when she was taken from this world, I just remember seeing cars with writings on them for her on my drive to the valley around that time. I missed a lot of great Tejano music for sure, maybe even when it was at its peak. Eventually a club (Tejano West) opened so I could go see some of these bands, but unfortunately never this group as is or Los Garcia Brothers with Jimmy. The Tejano radio station was sold to Univision after a couple of years, probably as Tejano started losing its popularity.
Copare sube uno de Tony de la rosa puros exitos k sea mas de 2 horas asi como este si c puede x k aki en el jale escuchamos puro tejano en Atlanta Georgia bro
@@DeAquellasMusic This recording sounds very good, how did you keep the cassette in such good shape? My Mazz and La Mafia cassettes didn't transfer too well to digital. :D
u should try them in a old cassette deck like the ones with double sides what i have is a 1985 poiner ct-1060w deck it gives a good sound quality and they have transfer well so far
@@bgnPrinceton Yes I have both. They were recorded in 94 At Hallaballoos Club in Houston. They played together that night and both bands recorded a Live Album which were released in 94 under EMI Capital.
@@Junior_675 Don't know who owns the rights now, but much old Tejano music was owned by EMI at some point. Not sure why they don't reprint limited runs, I'm sure they would sell. Or even just sell them online as downloads.