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NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Entertainment > Selena’s legacy lives on in these younger Latina musicians
Selena’s legacy lives on in these younger Latina musicians
Entertainment

Selena’s legacy lives on in these younger Latina musicians

Last updated: March 31, 2025 2:15 pm
Editorial Board Published March 31, 2025
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Monday marks 30 years because the tragic loss of life of Selena Quintanilla-Pérez modified the world of Latin music perpetually. And but, in that point, it feels as if her legacy because the “Queen of Tejano” by no means light away. One can attempt to measure her influence within the tangible: within the variety of posthumous albums offered, in a number of documentaries, a Netflix TV sequence about her life and the 1997 biopic that catapulted Jennifer Lopez to fame.

However to know the gravity of a star as large as Selena, can be to have a look at one thing that’s tougher to enumerate: the traces of her voice, her fashion and her ambition in right now’s Latin artists.

What I name “The Selena Generation” is comprised of artists who got here of age within the years after the singer’s loss of life. Most of them by no means had the possibility to purchase her information after they debuted or see her carry out reside, but nonetheless, her affect on them is unmistakable. This cohort consists of established stars like Karol G and Becky G, in addition to rising skills like Estevie, Gale, Angelina Victoria and Vanita Leo, amongst others. For a lot of of them, there was no time earlier than Selena. She’s simply all the time been part of their lives.

Becky G on the set of her music video “Otro Capítulo,” filmed in Elysian Park in Los Angeles.

(Jill Connelly/For De Los)

“I’ve been listening to and watching videos of Selena performing before I could even form memories,” Becky G tells De Los. Born and raised in Inglewood, Calif., she says her mom was all the time taking part in Selena’s music of their home. Through the years, the Mexican American singer has carried out a number of Selena medleys, and included a Selena-inspired track, “Otro Capítulo,” on her most up-to-date album, “Encuentros.”

For Becky, the late singer’s profession trajectory is “the blueprint.” Selena’s path from acting at eating places, golf equipment and weddings throughout South Texas to drawing record-breaking crowds on the Houston Astrodome, as a girl in Tejano music, wasn’t simply aspirational — it was revolutionary. “She broke barriers,” Becky G says. “She took our music to places we never thought in our wildest dreams it would reach. She showed younger generations, including myself, that we could be on stage one day, too.”

It’s tough to think about what Latin music may seem like right now with out Selena’s success. Although artists like Gloria Estefan and Lisa Lisa had loved mainstream reputation within the U.S. through the Latin “boom” of the ’80s, Selena’s ascent as a Mexican American from Texas was one thing extra novel. The very style she was occupying instructed the story of a area that, like Selena herself, had been formed by a number of cultures.

Selena was a mosaic of the Tex-Mex identification. She sang primarily in Spanish — a language she wasn’t fluent in — whereas including in dashes of country-western fashion to her wardrobe, whereas modeling her performances after American pop stars like Janet Jackson and Madonna. With a foothold within the cultures on each side of the border, she bridged the hole between them by being 100% herself, charting a path that hadn’t beforehand existed for others like her.

“Today, Latin artists are dominating charts, collaborating with global superstars, and selling out arenas, and I think we owe a lot of that to Selena,” says Estevie. The Gen Z cumbia star has drawn comparisons to the “Tejano Madonna” since bursting onto the scene in 2021.

And whereas Selena could have been achingly near attaining the crossover success of her desires when she was killed in 1995, the scope of her affect grew in her loss of life. To today, her last album, “Dreaming of You,” stays the best-selling Latin album of all time within the U.S., and the primary predominantly Spanish-language album to debut at No. 1 on the Billboard 200. “She proved that Latin music could cross over without losing its essence,” Estevie tells De Los. “She showed that women could lead, and be unapologetically themselves in a male-dominated industry.”

Cumbia Pop Star Estevie at Waterloo Park on Friday, March 15, 2024 in Austin, TX.

Cumbia pop star Estevie on Selena’s affect in music: “She showed that women could lead, and be unapologetically themselves in a male-dominated industry.”

(Cat Cardenas)

Her energy was obvious to Puerto Rican singer-songwriter, Gale, from the primary time she watched the “Selena” movie. Now 31, she remembers spending hours as a child performing Selena’s songs in her lounge, working towards and perfecting her routines.

“I was instantly hooked,” she says. “She was my first love in music; her voice, her energy, her power. Selena showed the world that Latin women belong on big stages. She made me feel like I could do this too.”

Like Gale, Chicago-born música Mexicana singer Angelina Victoria was mesmerized by the 1997 biopic, catching glimpses of her future self within the story of a bit woman who grew as much as develop into a star. When she was older, she noticed footage of the singer’s historic efficiency on the Houston Rodeo in 1995. “Watching that for the first time gave me chills,” she remembers. “Her confidence, her smile, her vocals, dance moves — the way she commanded the stage was so electrifying. She made it look effortless, but you could tell that every note, every move, came from the heart.”

At 22 years previous, Victoria is within the midst of making an attempt to ascertain herself as an artist. Nonetheless, she’s proud to proclaim Selena as her greatest inspiration due to how she navigated the complexities of her Mexican American heritage. “Before her, there was a perception that Latin artists had to stay in their lane,” Victoria tells De Los. “She paved the way for artists like me to embrace our culture while still evolving our sound. She made it clear that being in between two worlds is a strength, not a limitation.”

Earlier this month, whereas acting at South By Southwest in Austin, Victoria instructed the viewers she couldn’t go away Texas with out “singing a little Selena,” and launched right into a crowd-pleasing medley of “Como la Flor,” “Amor Prohibido” and “Baila Esta Cumbia.” She wasn’t alone; the identical day, San Antonio-based cumbia singer Vanita Leo, 22, wowed the gang at Austin’s Volstead Lounge with an impassioned efficiency of “Si Una Vez.”

It might be seen as a threat for rising artists to cowl such a legendary singer, particularly for a crowd in Selena’s house state; however past expressing their real admiration for her, it’s additionally a technique to show their mettle. Selena’s vocals, and her stage presence, are unimaginable to be phoned in.

“Performing a Selena cover in Texas is electric,” Leo tells De Los. “There’s always a massive reaction. Her music is woven into the fabric of our culture, and you can feel how much she still means to people the moment you start singing. It’s a reminder that her legacy isn’t just about the songs — it’s about the joy, pride and representation she gave our community.”

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