* En anglais uniquement
His fusion of tight tropical rhythms with American rock & roll earned
Mike Laure the title "El Rey del Trópico." Born in Jalisco in 1939,
Laure grew up listening to an assortment of cross-the-border rockers; he even borrowed the name for his group, Las Cometas, from his favorite,
Bill Haley's band.
Laure tempered his rock & roll inclinations with Cumbia rhythms learned from Colombia's
Sonora Dinamita. The fusion sparked a whole new style of music, termed chunchaca, and
Laure scored many Mexican hits during the mid-'60s, including "Banda Borracha," "Rajita de Canela," and "Tiburón, Tiburón." During the early '70s, the most important facet of
Laure's band, his cousin
Chelo, left for a successful solo career. Despite a few more hits during the mid-'70s,
Mike Laure's popularity waned by the 1980s. He was debilitated by a 1990 stroke, though he returned to live performance on a limited basis.
Laure's influence stayed strong, however, among several generations of Cumbia artists, from
Rigo Tovar in the '70s to
Fito Olivares in the '80s to
Yahari in the '90s. ~ John Bush