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HomeUS NEWSThe cumbia DJs of the streets : The Picture Show : NPR

The cumbia DJs of the streets : The Picture Show : NPR


People dance at Brenda Cazárez’s 40th birthday party as Sonido Colombia plays music in the Privada Cusco neighborhood of Monterrey, Mexico, on Aug. 12, 2023.

Ivan Kashinsky


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Ivan Kashinsky

This is part of a special series, Cumbia Across Latin America, a visual report across six countries developed over several years, covering the people, places and cultures that keep this music genre alive.

In the middle of the mountains of Monterrey, there is a Colombia chiquita, a Colombia regia, or royal. Monterrey is a city of migrants who came from the countryside to work in this industrial city. Perhaps it is the longing for a past life that connected the migrant neighborhoods of Monterrey to the songs about rural life along the Colombian coast. This is the land of the “sonideros,” DJs who collect cumbia and tropical music records and appeared on the scene in the 1960s. To this day, they bring their equipment to clubs and street parties.

A view of Monterrey from a building on December 24, 2022. Monterrey, Mexico is also known as “Colombia chiquita” or little Colombia. In this city in northern Mexico, Colombian cumbia was installed more than 50 years ago, when vinyl records arrived both from Mexico City and Texas. Fixer: Ivonne Azpeytia +528113993653

A view of Monterrey from a building on Dec. 24, 2022. The city is also known as “Colombia chiquita,” or Little Colombia.

Ivan Kashinsky


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Ivan Kashinsky

Lucy López is a sonidera (cumbia DJ) who broadcasts live to her fans daily on her Facebook page and plays cumbia records for them. He plays songs that his audience requests as well as messages or congratulations. In the photo, Lucy does her live show and her parents Pedro Niño Luisa López dance the Cumbias she plays for her audience. The world of sonideros is an activity dominated by men, there are very few respected sonideras in the field. Photo by Karla Gachet

Pedro Niño and Luisa López dance to cumbias played by their daughter, Lucy López, a sonidera who broadcasts live daily on her Facebook page, on Dec. 25, 2022.

Karla Gachet


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Karla Gachet

Lucy Lopez is a female cumbia sonidera (dj) who transmits every day to her fans on her Facebook page and plays cumbia records for them. She plays songs that her audience asks for as well as messages or congratulations. In the photos she is at her house where she transmits her show daily. This day was Christmas Eve, so her and her family prayed to baby Jesus before she did her show. Monterrey, Mexico is also known as “Colombia chiquita” or little Colombia. In this city in northern Mexico, Colombian cumbia was installed more than 50 years ago, when vinal records arrived both from Mexico City and Texas.

Lucy Lopez, a cumbia sonidera DJ, broadcasts her daily Facebook show from her home in Monterrey, where she plays requested cumbia tracks and messages for fans. On Christmas Eve, Dec. 24, 2022, she and her family prayed to baby Jesus before going live.

Karla Gachet


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Karla Gachet

MEXICO -Gabriel Dueñez, one of the best known DJs in Monterrey, who is credited for inventing cumbia rebajada, sits by his equipment in his house with his daughter, Gaby Dueñez, who is also a DJ and his wife, Jaunita Moreno, on August 11th, 2023, in Monterrey Metropolitan area, Mexico. Cumbia rebajada is cumbia slowed down. The style was created when the equipment of Dueñez began to Malfunction during a party. Monterrey, Mexico is also known as “Colombia chiquita” or little Colombia. In this city in northern Mexico, Colombian cumbia was arrived more than 50 years ago, when vinyl records arrived both from Mexico City and Texas. MEXICO - Gabriel Dueñez, uno de los Sonideros más conocidos de Monterrey, a quien se le atribuye el mérito de haber inventado la cumbia rebajada, se sienta junto a su equipo en su casa con su hija, Gaby Dueñez, quien también es Sonidera y su esposa, Jaunita Moreno, el 11 de agosto. 2023, en el área Metropolitana de Monterrey, México. Cumbia rebajada es cumbia ralentizada. El estilo se creó cuando el equipo de Dueñez comenzó a funcionar mal durante un partido. Monterrey, México también es conocida como “Colombia chiquita” o pequeña Colombia. A esta ciudad del norte de México llegó la cumbia colombiana hace más de 50 años, cuando llegaron los discos de vinilo tanto de la Ciudad de México como de Texas.

Gabriel Dueñez, one of the best-known DJs in Monterrey who is credited with inventing cumbia rebajada, sits by his equipment with his daughter, Gaby Dueñez, who is also a DJ, and his wife, Juanita Moreno, on Aug. 11, 2023, in Monterrey.

Ivan Kashinsky


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Ivan Kashinsky

Gabriel Dueñez is one of the best known “sonideros.” His daughter says that at a party, due to the overheating of his equipment, the tempo of a cumbia playing became much slower than normal. Thus, by accident, the cumbia rebajada was born alongside its slow dances, like the gavilán, or hawk, in which people dance hunched down low with their arms spread wide. This new style and the obsession with Colombia would become an urban subculture called Kolombia, and its members “cholombianos.” They borrow Los Angeles’ cholo style from their neighbors to the north.

Merany Yusseth Avila, a member of Unión de Cumbia, a group of young people who dance cumbia “wepa” in Monterrey, Mexico, poses for a portrait on August 23, 2023.

Merany Yusseth Avila, a member of Union de Cumbia, a group of young people who dance cumbia “regia” in Monterrey, poses for a portrait on Aug. 23, 2023.

Karla Gachet


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Karla Gachet

Vinyls belonging to Jose Vazquez's collection in his home in the Independencia neighborhood on August 9, 2023. Vasquez is a renowned sonidero (cumbia DJ) in Independencia.

Vinyl records in Vazquez’s collection at his home in Monterrey’s Independencia neighborhood on Aug. 9, 2023.

Karla Gachet


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Karla Gachet

Jose Vazquez y su nieto posan para un retrato en su casa en la colonia Independencia el 9 de Agosto del 2023. Vasquez es un reconocido sonidero (dj de cumbia) en la Independencia. Jose Vazquez and his grandson pose for a portrait at their home in the Independencia neighborhood on August 9, 2023. Vasquez is a renowned sonidero (cumbia DJ) in la Independencia.

Jose Catarino Vazquez Villegas and his grandson, Jesus Alejandro, pose for a portrait at their home in the Independencia neighborhood on Aug. 9, 2023. Vazquez is a renowned sonidero, or cumbia DJ, in La Independencia.

Karla Gachet


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Ana Karen Domínguez dances cumbia with Robert Escareno Rivas at Ray Charles Bar in Monterrey, Mexico, on December 23, 2022. Monterrey, Mexico is also known as “Colombia chiquita” or little Colombia. In this city in northern Mexico, Colombian cumbia was installed more than 50 years ago, when vinyl records arrived both from Mexico City and Texas.

Ana Karen Domínguez dances cumbia with Robert Escareno Rivas at Ray Charles Bar in Monterrey, Mexico, on Dec. 23, 2022.

Ivan Kashinsky


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A member of Unión de Cumbia, a group of young people who dance cumbia “wepa” in Monterrey, Mexico, poses for a portrait on August 23, 2023

Jeffrey Alexander Pérez Rivera, nearly 8 years old, poses for a portrait on Aug. 23, 2023. He is a member of Unión de Cumbia, a group of young people who dance cumbia “regia” in Monterrey.

Karla Gachet


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In Monterrey, cumbia was considered gang music because it thrived in low-income and migrant neighborhoods called colonias. At its epicenter is the colonia Independencia, or as everyone calls it, “Indepe.” In those times, young people who self-described as gangsters fought for territory, and one of their subversive acts was to tag the walls of the city with the verses of cumbia songs. Maikle Gutierrez lives in La Indepe and sells Colombian records and paraphernalia in front of the iconic Puente del Papa “Pope’s Bridge” where “sonideros” like Dueñez sold cassettes with mixes made at their parties in the ’80s. These recordings included shoutouts to family and friends who’d migrated out of the country. It is rare to enter a sonidero’s house and not find an altar dedicated to Landero, the Binomio de Oro, or the Corraleros de Majagual, as if La Indepe was frozen in time, forever enchanted by the Colombian cumbia of the ’60s and ’70s.

A man walks over the iconic La Puente de Papa in Monterrey December 28, 2022. The bridge is a meeting place for the sonideros, or DJs, and is also where a sonidero named Gabriel Dueñez sold cassette tapes of Cumbia rebajada, or slowed down cumbia. Monterrey, Mexico is also known as “Colombia chiquita” or little Colombia. In this city in northern Mexico, Colombian cumbia was installed more than 50 years ago, when vinyl records arrived both from Mexico City and Texas.

A man walks over the iconic Puente del Papa in Monterrey on Dec. 28, 2022.

Ivan Kashinsky


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Records hang from the ceiling in Maykle Gutierrez shop on August 12, 2022. He is a key player in La independencia/s sonidero culture. He buys and sells cumbia vinyls and any other Colombian memorabilia in a store under the famous Puente del Papa. Sonideros come trade or just hang at this store on the weekends.

Records hang from the ceiling in Maykle Gutiérrez’s shop beneath Monterrey’s Puente del Papa on Aug. 12, 2022.

Karla Gachet


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Karla Gachet

MEXICO - Alberto Aldaba Zuniga warms up before jamming with his band, Canto Negro, in Monterrey Mexico, on December 27, 2022. Monterrey, Mexico is also known as “Colombia chiquita” or little Colombia. In this city in northern Mexico, Colombian cumbia was arrived more than 50 years ago, when vinyl records arrived both from Mexico City and Texas.

Alberto Aldaba Zúñiga warms up before rehearsing with his band, Canto Negro, in Monterrey, Mexico, on Dec. 27, 2022.

Ivan Kashinksy


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At the turn of this century, organized crime took over the city, increasing violence, especially in the colonias, which were taken over by the cartels. Because of this, many adolescents were recruited and used as cannon fodder. Everything changed. During this dark period in Monterrey, street parties were moved indoors for security. The city was taken over by fear.

Cumbia party in Monterrey, Mexico, where the band Los Kombolokos played for a crowd. A lot of the attendees where families.

People dance at a cumbia party in Monterrey as the band Los Kombolokos performs for a crowd that includes many families, on Aug. 10, 2023.

Karla Gachet


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People dance at Wateke as the cumbia band Fusion Colombiana plays in Monterrey, Mexico on December 28th, 2022. Manager: Efraín Rico 8121114398

People dance as the cumbia band Fusión Colombiana plays at the bar Wateke in Monterrey on Dec. 28, 2022.

Ivan Kashinsky


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Juan Carlos Ovalle Lucio, a DJ that goes by Sonido Colombia, plays cumbia records in La Molienda, a bar, in Monterrey, Mexico on December 23, 2022. Monterrey, Mexico is also known as “Colombia chiquita” or little Colombia. In this city in northern Mexico, Colombian cumbia was installed more than 50 years ago, when vinyl records arrived both from Mexico City and Texas. Photo by Ivan Kashinsky

Juan Carlos Ovalle Lucio, a DJ who goes by Sonido Colombia, plays cumbia records at La Molienda, a bar in Monterrey, on Dec. 23, 2022.

Ivan Kashinsky


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After more than a decade of extreme violence, cumbia returned to the streets. “Cholombianos” disappeared due to constant police persecution for wearing baggy pants, Converse and eccentric hairstyles. Many young people who survived the violence of those years are now found at family parties, forever distancing themselves from the streets. Elizabeth Hernandez, a member of Union de Cumbia, says that when she dances, she even forgets she has a boyfriend. She dances as long as her body holds out.

A bar scene in the "La Independencia" neighborhood of Monterrey, Mexico, on Aug. 13, 2023. The bar opens on Sunday nights and fills with dancers from the neighborhood.

Dancers fill La Esquina Sonidera bar in Monterrey’s La Independencia neighborhood on Aug. 13, 2023. The bar opens Sunday nights, where some women stand at the bar and men pay them for dances.

Karla Gachet


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Karla Gachet

This coverage was made with the support of the National Geographic Society Explorer program.

Karla Gachet and Ivan Kashinsky are photojournalists based in Los Angeles. You can see more of Karla’s work on her website, KarlaGachet.com, or on Instagram at @kchete77. Ivan’s work is available on his website, IvanKphoto.com, or on Instagram at @ivankphoto.

This work was also featured in a video produced in collaboration with editor Alejo Reinoso, and was recognized by the 2025 POY Latam Awards in the multimedia category.




This story originally appeared on NPR

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