Industry on edge after Mexican musicians killed
Victims had no ties to drugs, but many fear gangs are targeting music scene
Americas video |
Living on the edge in Rio July 13: Two Brazilian brothers live, sleep and eat in a vertical apartment on an outer wall of a Rio de Janeiro building. NBC's Kurt Gregory reports. |
![]() |
Breaking news alerts (about 1 per day) |
Find more alerts at alerts.msnbc.com |
MEXICO CITY - The latest celebrity victims of Mexico's violence crooned about love and loss, not drugs and guns. So while the killings of "narco-corrido" singers earlier this year drew attention, the newest attacks drove fear into the heart of Mexico's music industry.
After the brutal slayings of several musicians, including Sergio Gomez, lead singer for the top-selling K-Paz de la Sierra, even mainstream singers are worried they will be inadvertently identified with warring drug gangs.
"What can I say? We are dismayed about this. I mean, we are all in the same boat," said Javier Diaz, representative of Los Tucanes del Norte, a popular group that often poses with assault rifles to promote its songs and violence-filled videos.
None of the recent victims were known for drug ballads, although Gomez had reportedly received death threats urging him not to appear in the capital of the western state of Michoacan, a hotbed of the drug trade where he was tortured and strangled to death on Sunday.
Some fear that singers, whether they have any links to the cartels or not, are routinely "adopted" by drug gangs, who post Internet videos showing them torturing and executing rivals to soundtracks of popular tunes.
"It really has people worried, because you never know if you go to a concert, what will happen, whether somebody might get shot," said Pablo Zuack, press coordinator for Bandamax, a cable TV channel specializing in northern Mexican music. "When you interview a performer, you never know if it's the last story you'll write about him."
Elijah Wald, author of the book "Narcocorrido," said the musicians' fears may be justified.
"They've just kidnapped and murdered a major international star traveling with bodyguards," he said. "That is a very clear message: 'We can get anybody.'"
Musician not known as a target
Carolina Jaramillo, a publicist who represented Gomez and other acts, said Gomez had no ties to drugs that she knew of and she had no reason to believe he would be a target.
"This year, and last year, we have seen a lot of violence," she said. "We don't know where the next one could come from."
Gomez's manager, who is also named Sergio Gomez, told the Televisa network that the singer had no ties to drug gangs, but had received threats earlier in the day warning him against performing in Morelia, which has been the site of bloody turf battles between Mexico's two main cartels.
The group had canceled an appearance in Morelia last year after similar threats, according to band representative Mario Olvera, and Gomez refused to cancel again.
After the concert, he left with two business associates but was intercepted by 10 Chevrolet Suburbans. His body turned up on a rural roadside with signs of strangulation and severe bruising on the thorax and abdomen, as well as burns on the legs. The business associates reportedly were released unharmed.
Hundreds of people mourned Gomez early Tuesday in his native Ciudad Hidalgo, and a ceremony was planned later in the day in Mexico City, where he was to be cremated. The ashes were being sent to Indiana, where his closest relatives live, according to local news media.
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM AMERICAS |
| Add Americas headlines to your news reader: |
Find the perfect online school and Boost your Career! Free Info Pack.
www.EarnMyDegree.com
Sponsored links
Resource guide




