Pubdate: Wed, 7 Aug 2002 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2002 San Jose Mercury News Contact: http://www.bayarea.com/mld/mercurynews Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/390 Author: John Sevigny, Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/area/Mexico RADIO TUNES OUT ANTI-FOX SONG Mexican Stations Fear Government Backlash Over Hit MONTERREY, Mexico - The latest accordion-driven hit by Los Tigres del Norte pounds from cantina jukeboxes and is belted out by street musicians, but you won't hear it on the radio. The group -- which drew fire in the past for songs about drug traffickers -- is now mocking President Vicente Fox. "Oh, now that change has come, we can all toast it with a glass of Coca-Cola," their new song says, referring to Fox's former job at the soft-drink giant. Some in the music industry say radio stations steer clear of "Chronicle of a Change" because they fear losing government advertising, a mainstay for most Mexican media. Servando Cano, publicist for Los Tigres del Norte, was reluctant to talk about the song's lyrics or the chilly reception it received from radio stations. "All I know is that it's not being played on the radio," he said. "I don't know what the motives of the radio stations are. I just tell people that if they want to hear it, they have to buy the compact disc." There is no evidence Fox has used his power to retaliate against unfavorable media depictions -- even though, two years after he was elected, his inability to produce concrete results has bred hundreds of unflattering cartoons, editorials and television satires. His office did not immediately return calls for comment on "Chronicle of Change." But some people say the fear of retaliation is enough to keep the song off the air -- especially in conservative northern Mexico, where support for Fox's National Action Party is strong. "Other stations don't want problems with the current government, so we're the only ones locally who play it," said Ricardo Escobedo, programmer for La Regiomontana, an AM station in this northern Mexican city of nearly 4 million people. Playing on the campaign slogan, "For a Change," which Fox used to unseat the longtime ruling party, the song asks, "Now, my Zorro [Fox, in Spanish], when are we going to really get this change?" The Tigres, masters of the "corrido" style of storytelling song, go on to depict hungry farmers face-down in the dust while executives of the state-run oil company vacation in Las Vegas. The song describes an economically polarized nation that hasn't changed much since Fox's historic 2000 election. But even without airplay, it's hard not to hear the song in this city two hours south of the Texas border. Musicians with guitars sing their own versions from the city's rattling buses in the hopes that passengers will give them some change. In winding, open-air markets, fans snatch up countless pirated copies of the CD, which sell for as little as $3. The Tigres have waded into presidential politics before in a 30-year career known for colorful, Western-style costumes, four-hour-plus performances and songs chronicling everything from love affairs to the travails of immigrants in the United States. In 1995, they scored a hit with "The Circus," which criticized former President Carlos Salinas de Gortari and his brother Raul, who is now in prison on a conviction of masterminding a political slaying. But that song was released after Salinas left office. The Tigres also are credited with popularizing "narcocorridos" -- ballads that tell bloody stories of real-life drug traffickers. Some say the songs glamorize violence, and those tunes also are often scratched from radio playlists. Escobedo said the new song, which appears on the compact disc "Uniting Borders," simply reflects the corrido style and provides a snapshot of reality. "The corrido is nothing more than a three-minute news report," he said. "This particular song just reflects the current state in which the country finds itself." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake