It’s Wednesday and time again for another imaginary trip to a desert island. And that also means I have to pick a song I would take with me by an artist or band I like but haven’t written about or only rarely covered. Thank goodness I don’t have to do this in real life – I’d go nuts with one song only and the other “rules”.
I’m doing this little exercise in alphabetic order and I’m up to “l”. Artists/ bands in my music library, who start with that letter, include Larkin Poe, Cindy Lauper, Led Zeppelin, Little Richard, The Lovin’ Spoonful and Lynyrd Skynyrd, among others. And my pick are Los Lobos and Kiko and the Lavender Moon, a really cool tune I wouldn’t have picked without the above restrictions. Frankly, this was a tough decision for me, since I still don’t know the band from East L.A. very well.
Kiko and the Lavender Moon appeared on the band’s sixth studio album Kiko released in May 1992. The tune was written by co-founding members David Hildago (guitars, accordion, violin, banjo, piano, percussion, vocals) and Louie Pérez (drums, vocals, guitars, percussion). Both remain part of the group’s present line-up. I dig the vibe of this tune, though it’s tricky to characterize. I can hear some retro jazz and a dose of Latin groove. If it doesn’t speak to you the first time, I’d encourage you to give it at least one more listen!
Los Lobos, who blend rock & roll, Tex-Mex, country, zydeco, folk, R&B, blues and soul with traditional Spanish music like cumbia, bolero and norteño, were founded by Hildago and Pérez in East Los Angeles in 1973. When they met in high school, they realized they liked the same artists, such as Fairport Convention, Randy Newman and Ry Cooder. Subsequently, they asked their fellow students Frank Gonzalez (vocals, mandolin, arpa jarocha), Cesar Rosas (vocals, guitar, bajo sexto) and Conrad Lozano (bass, guitarron, vocals) to join them, completing band’s first line-up. Rosas and Lozano are also still around.
In early 1978, the band, then still known as Los Lobos del Este de Los Angeles, self-released their eponymous debut album in Spanish. By the time of sophomore album How Will the Wolf Survive?, their first major-label release from October 1984, the band had shortened their name to Los Lobos and started to write songs in English. In 1987, Los Lobos recorded some covers of Ritchie Valens tunes for the soundtrack of the motion picture La Bamba, including the title track, which became their biggest hit. While it’s a great cover, I deliberately avoided it. Los Lobos are much more than a one-hit wonder! To date, they have released more than 20 albums, including three compilations and four live records.
Here’s how Kiko and the Lavender Moon and Los Lobos sound in 2022:
Following are some additional insights from Songfacts:
This song is about a magical, albeit lonely character called Kiko, who comes out at night to “dance and dance.” In our interview, Los Lobos’ drummer and songwriter, Louie Pérez, told us he reflected upon his childhood when writing the lyrics: “I took this remembrance of the little house that I grew up in and Mom’s dresser-top altar, and was able to fold that into a song.”
In 1993, Los Lobos performed this on Sesame Street, changing the lyrics to “Elmo and the Lavender Moon.”
Kiko saw Los Lobos adopt a more experimental sound, that mixed blues, rock, folk and psychedelic influences. Perez spoke to us about the spiritual experience that was the making of Kiko, which is his favorite Los Lobos album: “There’s a point when all songwriters fall into this vacuum where it seems so amorphic and almost surreal… all of us were on this crazy trip. It was like a canoe into the fog, all of us were right there paddling away, and knowing we just have to paddle. We don’t know where we’re going, but we just trusted it. And it was amazing.”
Sources: Wikipedia; Songfacts; YouTube; Songfacts
A great band that I’ve seen once (if you don’t count the live stream) and need to see again. I have the “Kiko” CD somewhere. Not sure if I’d take that particular song. Somewhere else in the alphabet for these guys I might pick ‘Shakin’, Shakin’ Shakes” or “Don’t Worry Baby.” Can’t go wrong either way.
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These are both great, kind of Stonesy!
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I’ve never heard this one before…I would have never guessed it was them…I like this one a lot.
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It’s a bit of an unusual tune. I liked it better when I listened to it for the second time!
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Interesting choice! Just listening to it now… new to me, my sweetie might know it since she likes Los Lobos quite a bit (being from Texas and with some Mexican in her family a few generations back it’s right down her alley). For me, it would be a tough tough call. A toss up between something from John Lennon (maybe ‘#9 Dream’) and something from Level 42….they’d be a tossup between almost anything off ‘World Machine’ and ‘Running in the Family’.
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While I’m glad I covered “Kiko and the Lavender Moon,” I definitely would have picked a different tune, had there not been my self-imposed restrictions!
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I love that whole album – one of the best of the decade in my book.
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That’s great. Would “Kiko” be your favorite Los Lobos album?
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I think it’s my favourite – I haven’t given a lot of the others a good listen, but it seems to be the perfect point for them – keeping their rootsy authenticity while adding a bit of an experimental touch.
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