Artist

Jenni Rivera

Genre: Latin ,Mexican Traditions
Origin: U.S.A
Active: 1992 - 2012
Listen on Coda
Vocalist and songwriter Jenni Rivera rose to prominence as a leading figure in the regional Mexican arena prior to her abrupt passing in 2012, an event that transformed her into one of the Latin sphere’s most heartrending figures. Her primary domain was banda, equally recognized as corrido, among the array of Mexican genres that command fervent followings both south of the border and across the southwestern United States. Although fluent in norteño, tejano, mariachi, and ranchero, the Mexican-American performer issued norteño renditions of select tracks yet maintained banda/corrido as her central idiom. The scarcity of prominent women within that realm rendered her presence especially notable. Across Mexican music history, celebrated female voices have included Rocio Durcal, Lola Beltrán, Selena, and the polarizing Gloria Trevi, yet banda remained overwhelmingly male-centric. In her home market Rivera received the designations “La Diva de la Banda” and “La Primera Dama del Corrido.”

Despite her Mexican heritage, Rivera was born and raised in Long Beach, California—the same Los Angeles suburb that produced gangsta rap star Snoop Dogg. Her parents had relocated from Mexico, and she attained fluency in both English and Spanish. Her father, Pedro Rivera, along with her brothers, performed Mexican music centered on banda/corrido, norteño, and ranchero, actively nurturing her musical inclinations. At college she pursued business administration rather than music studies, later working as a real estate agent while continuing to assist her father in operating his record label. Around 1994 she secured a contract with Capitol/EMI’s Latin division; her debut album, Chacalosa, appeared the following year. Additional Capitol/EMI projects followed, among them Adios a Selena, before she moved to Sony’s Latin roster in the late ’90s.

In 1999 Rivera joined Fonovisa, a leading imprint in the regional Mexican sector. Her inaugural Fonovisa release, Que Me Entierren con la Banda, arrived that year and featured the hit “Las Malandinas,” succeeded in the early 2000s by Dejate Amar (containing the hit “Querida Socia”) and Se las Voy a Dar a Otro. Fonovisa issued the conceptual Homenaje a las Grandes in 2003, widely viewed as her most ambitious outing to that point. The title translates as “homage to the great ones,” and the album paid tribute to distinguished Mexican female artists including Lucho Villa, Mercedes Castro, Rocio Durcal, Lola Beltrán, and Alejandra Guzmán. Further 2000s releases achieved strong chart results, earning Rivera multiple Latin Grammy nominations. Her life ended suddenly and tragically in December 2012 when a plane transporting her and members of her touring party crashed in the mountains of northern Mexico. Devotees mourned while honoring her legacy; several posthumous projects reached the top of the charts, among them the compilation La Misma Gran Señora and live documents comprising the two-part 1969: Siempre, En Vivo Desde Monterrey and 1 Vida, 3 Historias: Despedida de Culiacán, as well as the 2016 audio-video release Paloma Negra Desde Monterrey.