Y La Bamba lyrics
Artist · 172 305 listeners per month
Artist's albums
Lucha
2023 · album
Hues (feat. Devendra Banhart)
2023 · single
Collapse
2023 · single
Dibujos De Mi Alma
2023 · single
Mariposa De Coalcomán
2020 · single
Entre Los Dos
2019 · album
Entre Los Dos
2019 · single
Rios Sueltos
2019 · single
Something Wild
2019 · single
Mujeres
2019 · album
Boca Llena
2019 · single
Cuatro Crazy
2018 · single
Mujeres
2018 · single
Ojos Del Sol
2016 · album
Oh February
2013 · EP
Court the Storm
2012 · album
Lupon
2010 · album
Alida St
2008 · album
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Biography
To declare one thematic narrative from Lucha, Y La Bamba’s seventh album, would be to chisel away a story within a story within a story into the illusion of something singular. “Lucha is a symbol of how hard it is for me to tackle healing, live life, and be present,” Luz Elena Mendoza Ramos, lead vocalist and producer of Y La Bamba, says of the title behind the album which translates from Spanish to English as ‘fight’ and is also a nickname for Luz, which means light. The album explores multiplicity—love, queerness, Mexican American and Chicanx identity, family, intimacy, yearning, loneliness—and chronicles a period of struggle and growth for Mendoza Ramos as a person and artist Lucha was born out of isolation at the advent of COVID-19 lockdowns, beginning with a cover of Hank Williams’ “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry,” and following Mendoza Ramos as she moved from Portland, Oregon to Mexico City, returning to her parents’ home country while revisiting a lineage marred by violence and silence, and simultaneously reaching towards deeper relationships with loved ones and herself. The album reflects “another tier of facing vulnerability,” as Mendoza Ramos explains, and is a battle cry to fight in order to be seen and to be accepted, if not celebrated, in every form—anger and compassion, externally and internally, individually and societally.