On
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April 19 last year, the body of the
42-year-old Mexican rapper Mr. Yosie Locote was dumped in an empty lot in the
western city of Guadalajara. A note claiming he had been killed because of a
connection to an enemy of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel was pinned to his
chest with a screwdriver. In a separate case three days later, authorities
arrested another local hip-hop star, the 24-year-old Christian Palma, known as
Qba, who confessed to dissolving the dead bodies of three film students in
sulfuric acid on the orders of that same organization.
Both artists were
pioneers of rap malandro (thug rap), a style of hip-hop the Mexican press has
cast as the soundtrack to the country’s drug war. With performers rapping about
meth abuse and massacres, the media blames the music itself for perpetuating
gangland violence. But defenders of the genre argue that rap provides
youngsters from poor urban areas with an attractive
alternative to drug cartel recruitment.
Young people have taken
to this music with enthusiasm in Guadalajara, the capital of the state of
Jalisco and Mexico’s second-largest city. Although Jalisco is better known for
tequila and mariachi, Guadalajara’s low-income Oblatos sector has become a
mecca for the country’s hip-hop scene, spawning numerous stars including Mr.
Yosie Locote and Qba.
“[Hip-hop] is blowing
up right now,” said Guadalajara rapper Push El Asesino (Push the Killer). “But
problems can follow you when you’re rapping about the streets and violence.”
Oblatos is home to
250,000 people and around a dozen warring gangs. The gunfights and grieving
parents multiply each year. “People used to scrap with stones,” Push, who grew
up just outside the neighborhood, told me. “Today, everybody has a pistol.”
At 31, Push is a
veteran of Guadalajara’s rap scene. He has collaborated with most of the city’s
top rappers, including Qba, who appeared on his 2016 single “El Vicio & La
Calle” (“The Vice and the Street”). Push also worked with Mr. Yosie Locote on
early tracks such as “Dame Un Motivo” (“Give Me a Motive”) from 2012 and “La
Calle En La Piel” (“The Street in the Skin”), released two years later.
Push stressed that his
relationship with both rappers was purely artistic and he had no street gang or
cartel affiliations. In contrast, Mr. Yosie Locote was a known member of
Florencia 13, an offshoot of the Los Angeles gang of the same name. Florencia
13 is the largest of the “first generation” cliques that emerged in the 1990s
when Mexican deportees returned from the United States, bringing gang culture
with them.
“These groups
correspond closely to their Mexican-American counterparts,” said Miguel
Vizcarra, the general coordinator of the academic study Puro Loko de Guanatos:
Masculinities, Violence and Generational Change in Corner Groups in
Guadalajara. “We see identical tattoos and graffiti. They also have a similar
organization, with pseudo-military ranks like generals and soldiers.”
Florencia 13 aligns
with the Sureños, a Southern California group linked to the Mexican Mafia, a
U.S. prison gang. They flaunt the blue bandanas associated with Sureño gangs,
while avoiding the red clothing of the rival Norteños from Northern California.
Gang members adopt the “cholo” dress code of shaved heads and baggy tees. They
wear tattoos of the number 13 — representing the thirteenth letter of the
alphabet, the letter M, for Mexican Mafia.
In Oblatos, gang
affiliation does not historically imply links to the cartels. Groups such as
Florencia 13 are more interested in a shared identity wound up with their
specific territory. They gather at night on their designated corners and defend
the neighborhood from unwanted intruders (including rival gangs and the
police). In fact, Vizcarra said many locals feel the gang provides protection
from criminals.
Florencia 13 garnered
media attention after the U.S. rap label Cirkulo Asesino signed Mr. Yosie
Locote, releasing his first album Trece Reglas del Varrio (Thirteen Hood Rules)
in 2012. The record offers a vivid portrait of gang life, set to dark beats
influenced by West Coast G-Funk. But despite his growing profile, Mr. Yosie
Locote stayed in Oblatos. He was a regular on the street corner, even as
predatory newcomers eyed his territory with interest.
Gang culture in Mexico
transformed after the rise of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (Cártel de
Jalisco Nueva Generación, or CJNG) in the early 2010s. This ferocious group
came to dominance amid a shocking wave of violence in Jalisco. The cartel was
behind massacres, deadly ambushes of security forces and a rocket launcher attack
on a military helicopter in 2015. “A battle for control of the streets is
raging,” Vizcarra said. “It is not just between gangs and police. Today, there
is a third actor — organized crime.”
In Guadalajara, the
sprawling syndicate is battling Nueva Plaza, a splinter group headed by Carlos
Enrique Sánchez, alias “Cholo.” As the turf war rages, homicides have soared.
Jalisco recorded 2,420 killings last year, more than five times the number for
2008.
Mr. Yosie Locote was
one of the highest-profile casualties of this conflict in Guadalajara. The
rapper vanished from an Oblatos market on April 17 last year. His butchered
corpse surfaced two days later under a threatening message scrawled on white
card. “This is going to happen to all those who keep supporting ‘Cholo,’” the
note began, essentially accusing him of an alignment with the principal rival
of the CJNG in the Guadalajara area. However, little concrete evidence of such
an association exists, and while fans demanded justice, no one has been charged
with the crime.
While the murder of Mr.
Yosie Locote sparked domestic media interest, it was nothing compared to the
storm of global attention that stirred the following week.
On April 22 last year,
police arrested two men, including Qba, in connection to the kidnapping and
murder of three film students. Authorities said the recording artist had
confessed to working for the CJNG, disposing of bodies in acid for 3,000 pesos
($160) a week.
The film students —
Javier Salomón, 25, Daniel Díaz and Marco Ávalos, both 20 — had been missing
for more than a month. According to prosecutors, CJNG operatives seized the
trio in a Guadalajara suburb, perhaps mistaking them for rivals as they filmed
a school project at a house tied to Nueva Plaza. The disappearance sparked nationwide
protests and statements of outrage from Oscar-winning directors Alfonso Cuarón
and Guillermo del Toro.
Last December, the
United Nations insisted Mexican authorities keep searching for the students and
prosecutors reopened the case. Jalisco Attorney General Gerardo Octavio Solís
has said that despite his confession, Qba and the other suspects could
eventually be released due to irregularities in the original investigation,
though few specifics have been released to the public.
Nevertheless, five
people are behind bars for the crime. Qba sits in Guadalajara’s Puente Grande
prison, where he could face the maximum penalty of 140 years.
The rapper was a rising
star at the time of his arrest, registering up to five million YouTube views
per video. But one friend, who asked to remain anonymous, said he earned little
from music. The producers of his videos kept most of the proceeds from his
work. With a young son to support, the rapper had spent years hustling as a
tattoo artist on the side.
“His lifestyle
contrasted with his YouTube numbers,” the friend said. “He wanted to do
something with his life… Unfortunately, in that environment it’s difficult to
keep things clear.”
As a teenager, Qba
would meet his now-disbanded gang, Infernus 21, on the corner opposite his
house. Since forming on the fringes of Florencia 13 territory a decade ago,
Qba’s gang had fought the older, more powerful crew. The rapper even fled for
his life in 2015 and lived in a drug den in the suburbs.
Over time, the
influence of relatively benign Mexican-American gang culture has waned, while
the nihilism of the domestic drug war has taken hold. According to Vizcarra,
Infernus 21 was an archetypal “second generation” clique — loosely organized
and with a more individualistic ethos. Its members also displayed a startling
familiarity with violence, both inflicted and endured. Unlike older gangs,
Infernus 21 affiliates claimed no allegiance to the Mexican Mafia, nor did they
dress as cholos.
Hard drug use is
another factor separating “second generation” gangs and rappers from their
predecessors. While weed was the substance of choice for Mr. Yosie Locote,
Qba’s lyrics celebrate industrial inhalants, crack, and above all, crystal
meth.
In recent years, meth
has flooded Mexican cities, devastating marginalized communities. According to
government data, use of the drug in Jalisco nearly tripled between 2008 and
2016. The CJNG oversees all aspects of meth production, from smuggling precursor
chemicals through Mexico’s seaports to cooking the final product in clandestine
labs. In poor urban areas such as Oblatos, corner cliques complete the supply
chain, dealing drugs to their neighbors at the behest of cartels. Gang members
who refuse to cooperate (or work with rivals) face swift retribution. Many
others have left their gangs completely to become full-time foot soldiers for
the cartels. The meth epidemic has driven this mutation, as young addicts in
search of fast cash make ready recruits for organized crime.
Unidentified gunmen
killed Qba’s friend Luis “Cebo” Estrada in 2017. Other Infernus 21 affiliates
died in shootouts soon after. Few survivors remained in the area. It was the
same story across Guadalajara, as death squads came to claim the streets for
the cartels.
“The idea of a
neighborhood gang is dying out,” said rapper Nez Lemus. “No one wants to be on
a corner today because there are other forces at work… I saw shootouts and
friends die by my side, so I chose a more peaceful path… I chose music to talk
about the things that happened to me.”
Following Qba’s
downfall, several rappers reveled in the second-hand infamy and produced tracks
celebrating him. The most popular of these was “Free Qba,” by AB Perez, another
Oblatos rapper who was himself arrested on a double murder charge last July. By
the time “Free Qba” made YouTube, both rappers were behind bars in the same
prison.
But the fallout from
the Qba case hit many rappers hard, with mainstream media singling out rap
malandro for glorifying a drug war that has claimed more than 230,000 lives
across Mexico since 2006. “The news affected everyone,” Lemus said. “People in
rap thought, fuck, [music agents] are going to think we’re all involved and
will stop working with us.’”
Many Guadalajara
artists, such as José Maldonado, who raps as C-Kan, view their work as an
alternative to the drug war, rather than a component of it. Since releasing his
first mixtape in 2004, the 31-year-old has achieved unprecedented success.
C-Kan’s most popular YouTube video has more than 130 million views. He has even
crossed over to the U.S. hip-hop world, collaborating with artists such as
Xzibit, B-Real of Cypress Hill, and Compton Menace.
I met C-Kan at a café
in the upmarket neighborhood he now calls home. He spent his teenage years in
Guadalajara’s Cuauhtémoc Zone, just outside of Oblatos, as a member of the
Cancha 98 gang. “Growing up, we were surrounded by narcos,” C-Kan told me.
“They could achieve things you could only dream of, like buying a house for
your mom… If it wasn’t for rap I could have ended up doing that instead.”
C-Kan believes music
can help young people resist the lure of cartel life, offering a legal path to
the money and recognition many criminals are seeking. His career has forged a
path for other Guadalajara rappers, such as Maniako and Tren Lokote. C-Kan’s
success has also rippled out to the producers, videographers, event organizers
and others who have worked in the city’s nascent rap industry. He surrounds
himself with a team of people from similar backgrounds, creating a growing hope
that creative endeavors can help young people leave street life behind.
“Drug trafficking is a
cancer that has spread across the country,” C-Kan said. “For me, music has
become an escape route... There are people that will pay you for music. YouTube
will pay you for videos. [Hip-hop] meant I could take myself out, take my
family out."
Read this article earlier this week. Interesting to think that this culture was originated by those deportees from America. A similar story of how American influenced countries like those of El Salvador with MS13 and this culture in Mexico.
ReplyDeleteWhere lifestyles are reflected and portrayed by ones social environment. Moreover, with those who are utilizing these skills to reinforce positive behaviors for legitimate financial purposes.
Communities at work.
Glad you posted this BB.
It's not just deportees. The main bridges for these gangs are members that act like Entrepreneurs and venture into Mexico to forge connections with gangs over there.
DeleteAmerica is an entire continent son, not just the US.
DeleteU are correct should have edited comment.
DeleteAmerica these days means the US,
Deletesince the Monroe Doctrine was discovered, it has been implemented every day, America for the Americans has created one America and LatinAmerica the Banana Republics continent that always gets not much more than table scraps
Good article -from a sureno from nevada
ReplyDeleteWs
DeleteEXCELLENT !
ReplyDelete"Hip hop offers alternative to drug lifestyle" he was killed for belonging to a different gang....one not aligned with cjng.... alot of hip hop artists try to or at least come from gang life.
ReplyDeleteExcellent piece, Chivisssssss !
ReplyDeleteCholos are no match for cartels in Mexico
ReplyDeleteNo match for what? Theyre all dope heads killing Raza.
DeleteThere is growing conflict between the rapping cholos and the corrida listening cartels. Its a conflict between country-side vs. city slums.
DeleteThe weed and the poppies made the cartels strong, but the meth and fent will strenghten the cholos.
In 10 years Mex will be much more fragmented and more violent than today.
When the afo had the cholos from barrio Logan they caused damage and had chapo running fleeing for his life
Delete8:04 cartels make their money here in the u.s. guess who they get taxed by? Yep the big homies. Paisas are a gold mine from the elotero to guy selling kilos. They all get taxed one way or another.
DeleteAll get taxed huh…you can't believe all movies and should do your homework instead. That's an opportunity for them and they are smart enough to exploit it. Working together is smarter and more beneficial in the long run than taxation. That's for short sighted people when it comes to dealing with cartels, mafias, etc.
DeleteRap and hip hop is for tintos. Rapping about the street life only influences ignorant people to stay ignorant and continue to stay with that mentality. You can’t compare rapping and hip hop to corridos at least corridos are made with real instruments even if you don’t like it. Hip hop and rap is often ripped off from other genres or what they call sampling
ReplyDeleteYou are showing a level of ignorance in the making of rap music and lyrics.Simple experiment,you try to put your own original lyric to a piece of background music ?
DeleteIts your right to not like it but dismissing it as rubbish ?
Rap is 99% glorify cholos/gangster life style. I would give them props if they actually rapped about doing positive things to get out the slums but even nipsy hustle was trying to do good but was a gang affiliate. I was raised in the ghetto and the only way to get our the lifestyle is to get out of there period. I tried to hang with old friends but they were negative people so I stopped hanging around them. They are all doing bad, you could imagine.. you cant do positive things around negative people and expect a positive outcome.. just saying
DeleteLa pinchi neta, if you look like a cholo,
Deleteyou are professing for El Cholo.
Now Qba is in puente grande por andar de caliente. Lucky mothaphakka, he is not dead.
Rubbish is rubbish, nobody is dismissing anything.
DeleteI understand the desperation, but please... Spare me...
Shut yo hating ass up..all that cholo bullshit played out
DeleteLots of cholos be saying rap is for tintos this and that. When all they listen to is oldies sang by tintos. But then againg what else would u expect from these not very smart fellows.
DeleteTo each their own. If you don't like rap/hip hop, that's your right, but all these critics on here are showing a level of ignorance themselves. Me myself I listen to both, rap, corridos, oldies, rock, bachata, boleros, r&b, etc. To all you critics, what does that make me?
DeleteTambien aye Narco grind! Musica metal. Buscalo en you tube.
ReplyDeleteYea, a nortneno grind group once opened up for grind core band Brujeria.
DeleteDon’t forget that spanky loco got wacked in Ensenada
ReplyDeleteHe dumb ass that was big toker from ES 13. Or Brownside. If u do not know do not open ur mouth leva.
DeleteMalandro Rap lol sooo I'm guessing Commando Esculsivo falls into that genre as well. They sing to the CDN
ReplyDelete