Los Chamos

Los Chamos were a famous Venezuelan boy band music formed in Caracas, Venezuela in 1981 to rival Menudo's success. Los Chamos were made up of six members and released their first album "Los Chamos-El Soldadito" sponsored by channel 8 of Venezuelan National TV.

In 1982, they released their second album called "Siempre Te Amare", which spanned the international hit, Canta Chamo.That album went Gold and Platinum in many Latin American countries. That hit led them to sing at Mexico's Estadio Azteca, among other big venues in Latin America.

The same year "Los Chamos" released a blockbuster movie called "Secuestro En Acapulco-Canta Chamo" alongside famous actresses Yuri-also a singer- and La Chilindrina.

In 1983 they released a third hit album called "Tu Como Yo" produced by famous singer and composer Rudy La'Scala.

Los Chamos went on tour for many years through Mexico, the United States, Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic, Central America, Panama, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, etc. After that huge success, four group members alleged poor working conditions and left to pursue other musical endeavors. Four more boys were brought in to form Los Chamos' line up, and another album was released. The sudden, drastic line up change and new album weren't as positively received by the public, and Los Chamos dissolved soon after. They tried their hand at a fifth release in 1990, with six new members, and after that, Los Chamos officially called it quits.

Nowadays some of the former members relocated and live in the United States, Mexico, Germany and Brazil. On August 29, 2018, Mexican television reporter Ana Maria Canseco announced on her webpage that former Chamo Will Marquez Uzcategui, "Chamo Will", died of pneumonia in his native Venezuela.[1]

Members

1981-1984

  • Ricardo Messina (sang in the first and second album and was replaced by Chamo Gabriel)
  • Argenis Brito
  • Enrique Couselo
  • Gabriel Fernández (Replaced Ricardo Messina)
  • Winston Márquez Uzcategui
  • Will Márquez Uzcategui
  • Walter Márquez Uzcategui
  • Roger Martin (only sang on the first album and was replaced by Argenis)
  • Raul (who was only in the group for a short amount of time and didn't make any songs with the group)

1984-1987

  • Adolfo Cubas
  • Cristóbal "Chris" Roges
  • Enrico "Henry" Madia
  • Gabriel Fernández
  • Enrique Couselo
  • Juan de León Santana

1987-1991

  • Álvaro Novoa
  • Ángel Guinness
  • Bernard
  • Carlos Baute
  • Freddy
  • Lino Martone
  • Romulo Ortiz

Discography

  • 1981: Los Chamos [Original Members: Ricardo Messina, Jesus Mercado, Enrique, Winston, William and Walter]
  • 1982: Siempre Te Amare [Original Members]
  • 1983: Tu Como Yo [Original Members]
  • 1984: Chamo Soy [New Members: Adolfo, Chris, Manuel and Juan]
  • 1990: Con un Poco de Amor [New Members: Alvaro, Angel, Bernald, Carlos, Freddy and Lino]
gollark: That's kind of funny, because lots of anarchocapitalists would probably use similar reasoning to argue *for* it.
gollark: It gets equivocated to mean so many things, like "respect"; it is more of a fuzzy label for a set of related concepts than a precise technical definition.
gollark: Not sure it's their fault. Consciousness is just tricky.
gollark: And consciousness is too poorly defined to mean anything much anyway.
gollark: Wrong. It isn't the issue.

See also

  • Venezuelan music

Latin American BoyBands. Latin American Pop groups.

References

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