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Alpha
Studio album by
Released1986
GenreTejano music
Length32:16
LanguageSpanish
LabelG.P. Productions
ProducerA.B. Quintanilla
Selena y Los Dinos chronology
The New Girl in Town
(1985)
Alpha
(1986)
Munequito de Trapo
(1987)
Singles from Alpha
  1. "Dame un Beso/Con Esta Copa"
    Released: 1986

Alpha is the debut studio album by American Tejano music group Selena y Los Dinos under Manny Guerra's G.P. Productions label. Released in 1986, it follows two unsuccessful albums the group recorded under different indie music labels. The group, led by vocalist Selena, recorded mostly cover songs by local musicians and Abraham Quintanilla's Los Dinos band. Wanting to stand out, bassist A.B. Quintanilla requested original material from Luis Silva after noticing his track record for writing award-winning songs. Silva ignored A.B.'s request and was inspired by Abraham to write songs himself. The group expanded to include keyboardist Ricky Vela and guitarist Roger Garcia. Vela collaborated with A.B. on "Dame un Beso", while Vela collaborated with Abraham on "Dame tu Amor". A.B. became the group's music producer and songwriter while Abraham encouraged the group to record songs of various genres to appeal to a wider audience. Despite her limited Spanish, Selena recorded all nine tracks phonetically.

"Dame un Beso" was released on radio and generated considerable airplay, it became Selena's first commercially acclaimed single of her career. It reached number one on radio stations in El Paso, Texas. The song was nominated at the 1987 Tejano Music Awards for Single of the Year and Song of the Year. The tracks "Dame un Beso" and "Dame tu Amor" received a resurgence in popularity in the 21st century; "Dame un Beso" peaked at number 25 on the US Billboard Latin Digital Song Sales chart in 2020, while "Dame tu Amor" peaked at number 31 on the Hot Ringtones chart in 2006. Alpha led Selena to be nominated for the Tejano Music Award for Female Vocalist of the Year and won the Tejano Music Award for Female Entertainer of the Year. The group's struggles during the production of Alpha was dramatized by Christian Serratos and Gabriel Chavarria as Selena and A.B., respectively in Netflix's two-part limited drama Selena: The Series (2020-21).

Background and production

[edit]

In 1972, Abraham Quintanilla departed the doo-wop-turned Tejano music group Los Dinos. After dwindling ticket sales and a decline in popularity, Abraham refocused on financially supporting his growing family.[1] The music business provided instability for Abraham, who received loans from his father who bailed him out of several failed investments he made for Los Dinos.[2] Abraham moved his family to Lake Jackson, Texas from Corpus Christi, Texas in hopes of settling down. He found it difficult to retire from music and spent his free time singing.[3] After realizing that his youngest daughter Selena could sing, Abraham, recalled "I saw the continuation of my dreams."[4] In 1980, Abraham opened a Tex-Mex restaurant with nine-year-old Selena fronting Southern Pearl, which included her older siblings 17-year-old A.B. Quintanilla on bass and 13-year-old Suzette Quintanilla on drums.[5] After the restaurant failed due to the 1980s oil glut that resulted in a recession in Texas in 1981, Abraham decided to promote the band, now called Selena y Los Dinos, and moved back to Corpus Christi after the family was evicted from their home.[6] In 1983, Selena recorded her first singles "No Puedo Estar Sin Ti"/"Se Acabo Aquel Amor" and "Ya Se Va"/"Tres Veces No" on Freddie Records. The singles received little airplay and generated no sales. In 1984, Freddie Records released the group's first cassette album Selena y Los Dinos. The label provided little promotion and did not want to "waste money" on Selena y Los Dinos and wanted to promote bigger acts already signed to their label. The label confronted Abraham that the group was premature and did not have faith that they would be a commercial threat telling Abraham "give [the group] another six years before [they would make] it."[7] Abraham pulled the group from Freddie Records for Bob Grever's Cara Records. They recorded The New Girl in Town which was released on cassette in 1985. Grever's music producer, Manny Guerra, departed Cara and formed his own label G.P. Productions. He dissolved Selena y Los Dinos' contract with Cara and the group began recording under Guerra's label in 1986.[8]

A.B. was frustrated that the group recorded mostly cover songs and wanted original compositions to stand out, he recalled "we had no songs. We were constantly looking for material". After approaching award-winning songwriter Luis Silva and ignoring requests for original songs, A.B. became upset. Abraham encouraged him to write songs himself, which A.B. recalled "was the beginning" of creating "Dame un Beso". He became the group's music producer and songwriter.[9] The group expanded to include Ricky Vela on keyboards and Roger Garcia on guitar, both were replacements of Rena Dearman and her husband Rodney Pyatt, respectively. A.B. collaborated with Vela on "Dame un Beso", their first songwriting credit.[10] The b-side, "Con Esta Copa", was a cover of the original Los Dinos' single. Vela collaborated with Abraham on "Dame tu Amor", their first collaboration. The track, "Lo Dejo Solo", which was penned by Vela in 1986, was shelved and remained unreleased until 2006 on the posthumously re-issue titled Classic Series, Vol. I, replacing the instrumental "El Tejano", also penned by Vela.[11] Abraham preferred that the group record various genres for Alpha to appeal to a wider audience. He found that the Valley enjoyed accordion-based music, while in West Texas listeners preferred cumbias, and Houston and Dallas audiences liked pop music. Daniel Bustamente, the record producer of Houston's Festival Chicano, recalled the music Selena performed at her first appearance at Miller Outdoor Theater as being "still not as full, but she always impressed everybody with that voice. The way she was able to do different things with her voice was like an opera singer, in a sense".[9] Despite her limited Spanish,[10] Selena recorded all nine tracks phonetically.[12]

Track listing

[edit]
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Dame un Beso"A.B. Quintanilla, Ricky Vela3:44
2."Con Esta Copa"Johnny Herrera3:00
3."Soy Amiga"Vela4:03
4."Corazoncito"A.B., Manny Guerra2:29
5."Sentimientos"Al Hurricane, Tiny Morrie3:15
6."Pero Cómo Te Ha Ido"Herrera3:04
7."Pa'Qué Me Sirve La Vida"Chucho Monge3:20
8."Pensando en Ti"Vela, Roger Garcia4:07
9."El Tejano"Vela, Guerra2:00
10."Dame tu Amor"Vela, Abraham Quintanilla3:44
Total length:33:32
2006 re-issue
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Dame un Beso"A.B., Vela3:44
2."Con Esta Copa"Herrera3:00
3."Soy Amiga"Vela4:03
4."Corazoncito"A.B., Guerra2:29
5."Sentimientos"Al Hurricane, Morrie3:15
6."Pero Cómo Te Ha Ido"Herrera3:04
7."Pa'Qué Me Sirve La Vida"Monge3:20
8."Pensando en Ti"Vela, Garcia4:07
9."Lo Dejo Solo"Vela3:31
10."Dame tu Amor"Vela, Abraham3:44

Reception and media appearances

[edit]

In 1986, Selena was featured in Tejano Entertainer magazine, calling her the youngest active female vocalist in the genre.[10] Joey Guerra of the Houston Chronicle ranked Alpha at number 15 on his list of the best Selena albums. Guerra called the recording a "hard-to-find album" and "Dame un Beso" as Selena's "first minor hits".[13] Rob Harvilla of The Ringer urged readers to watch Selena's 1987 performance of "Dame un Beso" on YouTube writing that viewers "can hear her outfit: the probably homemade sparkly silver spacesuit, the towering poof of hair that doubles the size of her head. You know what she looks like even if you’re not looking at her".[14]

The group's struggles during the production of Alpha was dramatized by Christian Serratos and Gabriel Chavarria as Selena and A.B., respectively in Netflix's two-part limited drama Selena: The Series (2020-21). In the series, A.B. looked at previous Tejano Music Award for Songwriter of the Year winners, noticing that Luis Silva is the top awarded writer. He requested original material from Silva at the 1986 Tejano Music Awards (TMAs), but Silva was unwilling to provide songs to "a bunch of kids". After persuading Silva to provide the group with two songs, he later regressed his decision the following day. Feeling defeated, A.B. isolates himself in his room prompting Abraham to inspire A.B. to write songs himself. A.B. teaches himself how to write songs by listening to previous winners, understanding a song's musical structure, and scale.[15] In the series, Serratos lip-synced to "Dame un Beso". Savannah Walsh of Elle called the scene an "exhilarating performance".[16] Marco Torres of Houstonia recalled listening to "Dame un Beso" two decades ago during Tejano music's golden age, finding the inclusion of the song in the series as nostalgic.[17]

Commericial performance

[edit]

The album led Selena to be nominated for the Tejano Music Award for Female Vocalist of the Year and won the Tejano Music Award for Female Entertainer of the Year at the 1987 Tejano Music Awards.[18] Alpha was a moderate success for the group, it provided them with a growing fan base.[19] "Dame un Beso" was released on radio and generated considerable airplay, it became Selena's first commercially acclaimed single of her career.[20] The song was one of the most played songs on radio stations in Texas while ranking at number one in El Paso, Texas.[21][18] It was nominated for Record of the Year at the Hispanic Music Awards in New Mexico.[18] "Dame un Beso" was also nominated at the 1987 Tejano Music Awards for Single of the Year and Song of the Year.[22] The tracks "Dame un Beso" and "Dame tu Amor" received a resurgence in popularity in the 21st century; "Dame un Beso" peaked at number 25 on the US Billboard Latin Digital Song Sales chart in 2020,[23] while "Dame tu Amor" peaked at number 31 on the Hot Ringtones chart in 2006.[24]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Works cited

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  • Patoski, Joe Nick (1996). Selena: Como La Flor. Boston: Little Brown and Company. ISBN 0-316-69378-2.
  • Walsh, Savannah (December 30, 2020). "Is Christian Serratos Really Singing in 'Selena: The Series'?". Elle. Retrieved May 21, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Torres, Marco. "Not Everything is Perfect, but "Selena: The Series" is Worth a Watch". Houstonia. Retrieved May 21, 2022.
  • Guerra, Joey. "Ranking Selena's albums: 'Dulce Amor' to 'Dreaming of You'". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved May 21, 2022.
  • Harvilla, Rob (March 31, 2021). "'60 Songs That Explain the '90s': A Glimpse of Selena, the Global Superstar". The Ringer. Retrieved May 21, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Joseph, Harriett Denise (2018). From Santa Anna to Selena : notable Mexicanos and Tejanos in Texas history since 1821. University of North Texas Press. ISBN 978-1574417234.
  • Jones, Veda Boyd (2013). Selena. Infobase Learning. ISBN 978-1438146379.
  • Marquez, Herón (2001). Latin Sensations. Lerner Publications Co. ISBN 082254993X.
  • Perez, Chris (2012). To Selena, with Love. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-1-101-58026-4.
  • Bisantz, Kate; Bisantz, Max (2018). Who Was...Selena?. Penguin Books. p. 112. ISBN 978-1101995501.
  • Mitchell, Rick (May 5, 1995). "In life, she was the queen of Tejano music. In death, the 23-year-old singer is becoming a legend". Houston Chronicle.
  • Quintanilla, Selena (2006). Classic Series, Vol. I (Media notes). A.B. Quintanilla](producer). Q-Productions. 635750012128.
  • Lapham, Bob (July 22, 1988). "Selena Headlines Show". Abilene Reporter-News. Retrieved May 1, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Zamora, Moisés (December 4, 2020). "Dame Un Beso". Selena: The Series. Season 1. Episode 2. Netflix.{{cite episode}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Bustios, Pamela (December 16, 2020). "Selena Returns to Latin Pop Albums Chart With 'Selena: The Series Soundtrack'" (PDF). Billboard Pro. Retrieved March 26, 2022.
  • "Hot Ringtones > September 23, 2006". Billboard. Archived from the original on October 7, 2012. Retrieved January 6, 2012.