Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
Music Appreciation
Related: About this forumYou Don't Know Texas Music If You Don't Know Flaco Jimenez
MUSIC
YOU DONT KNOW TEXAS MUSIC IF YOU DONT KNOW FLACO JIMÉNEZ
I can talk to my accordion and make it respond to me; I can make it happy or make it cry.

Flaco Jiménez photographed at his home on December 12, 2022.
Photograph by Arturo Olmos
By Flaco Jiménez, as told to Cat Cardenas
February 2023
This article is part of Texas Monthlys special fiftieth-anniversary issue. Read about the other icons that have defined Texas since 1973.
San Antonios 83-year-old Flaco Jiménezson, grandson, and brother of celebrated accordionistshas won six Grammys, including, most recently, a lifetime achievement award.
In the late sixties, a friend of mine, Doug Sahm, asked me if I wanted to blend in with the country rock he played. He was recording at Atlantic Records, so I said yes. The album was Doug Sahm and Band. That was my first experience at a major label, and thats where I met Dr. John and Bob Dylan. From there, word got around that I could play not just conjunto musicI could play country or a little rock. I started getting offers to record with heavyweights like Dwight Yoakam, Buck Owens, and Linda Ronstadt. It was my heyday.
I like to cross over. If I can understand what an artist is doing, then I can get the feel of it and blend to it. When I did Streets of Bakersfield with Dwight and Buck, the producer, Pete Anderson, said, Just play your ass off. So when they started recording, I started doing some weird stuff, and Pete said, No, not that much, man. Youre doing something that doesnt fit. Make it as simple as possible, and then people will understand. I was playing more progressive things, more advanced things, but I was careful enough to know when to blend in and not overpower whoever Im recording with.
Along the way, Doug, Freddy Fender, Augie Meyers, and I formed the Texas Tornados. There was no plan at all. We were in San Francisco. It was a place called Slims. I was on tour with my band, and Freddy and the other guys were playing someplace nearby. We were invited to jam, without rehearsing, without nada. We played about three songs, and there was a lot of good response to what we did. Paige Levy of Warner Records talked to Doug and made a plan for recording an album, which was Texas Tornados [in 1990]. Our hit, (Hey Baby) Que Paso, went sky-high. I mean, everybody knows (Hey Baby) Que Paso. We did about four albums, and then Doug passed away in 1999. We kept on playing, and then Freddy died in 2006. And then it was just me and Augie. Two tornadoes.
I think this young generation of conjunto, its changed a lot. Some bands started adding synthesizers and other kinds of instrumentation. Its too mechanical, I think. The feel is not there. They put too much sugar in the coffee. It might be that Im old-fashioned, but being old-fashioned is the real thing. Way back when, conjunto wasnt given any respect at all. They called it cantina music. Nowadays conjunto has respect all over the world.
{snip}
This article originally appeared in the February 2023 issue of Texas Monthly with the headline Accordion King. Subscribe today.
YOU DONT KNOW TEXAS MUSIC IF YOU DONT KNOW FLACO JIMÉNEZ
I can talk to my accordion and make it respond to me; I can make it happy or make it cry.

Flaco Jiménez photographed at his home on December 12, 2022.
Photograph by Arturo Olmos
By Flaco Jiménez, as told to Cat Cardenas
February 2023
This article is part of Texas Monthlys special fiftieth-anniversary issue. Read about the other icons that have defined Texas since 1973.
San Antonios 83-year-old Flaco Jiménezson, grandson, and brother of celebrated accordionistshas won six Grammys, including, most recently, a lifetime achievement award.
In the late sixties, a friend of mine, Doug Sahm, asked me if I wanted to blend in with the country rock he played. He was recording at Atlantic Records, so I said yes. The album was Doug Sahm and Band. That was my first experience at a major label, and thats where I met Dr. John and Bob Dylan. From there, word got around that I could play not just conjunto musicI could play country or a little rock. I started getting offers to record with heavyweights like Dwight Yoakam, Buck Owens, and Linda Ronstadt. It was my heyday.
I like to cross over. If I can understand what an artist is doing, then I can get the feel of it and blend to it. When I did Streets of Bakersfield with Dwight and Buck, the producer, Pete Anderson, said, Just play your ass off. So when they started recording, I started doing some weird stuff, and Pete said, No, not that much, man. Youre doing something that doesnt fit. Make it as simple as possible, and then people will understand. I was playing more progressive things, more advanced things, but I was careful enough to know when to blend in and not overpower whoever Im recording with.
Along the way, Doug, Freddy Fender, Augie Meyers, and I formed the Texas Tornados. There was no plan at all. We were in San Francisco. It was a place called Slims. I was on tour with my band, and Freddy and the other guys were playing someplace nearby. We were invited to jam, without rehearsing, without nada. We played about three songs, and there was a lot of good response to what we did. Paige Levy of Warner Records talked to Doug and made a plan for recording an album, which was Texas Tornados [in 1990]. Our hit, (Hey Baby) Que Paso, went sky-high. I mean, everybody knows (Hey Baby) Que Paso. We did about four albums, and then Doug passed away in 1999. We kept on playing, and then Freddy died in 2006. And then it was just me and Augie. Two tornadoes.
I think this young generation of conjunto, its changed a lot. Some bands started adding synthesizers and other kinds of instrumentation. Its too mechanical, I think. The feel is not there. They put too much sugar in the coffee. It might be that Im old-fashioned, but being old-fashioned is the real thing. Way back when, conjunto wasnt given any respect at all. They called it cantina music. Nowadays conjunto has respect all over the world.
{snip}
This article originally appeared in the February 2023 issue of Texas Monthly with the headline Accordion King. Subscribe today.
4 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
You Don't Know Texas Music If You Don't Know Flaco Jimenez (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Jan 2023
OP
I really like The Texas Tornados. Doug Sahm had the Sir Douglas Quintet and the hit
panader0
Jan 2023
#4
bahboo
(16,953 posts)1. I concur....
WokeMom
(25 posts)2. Is he in the Texas Tonados?
mahatmakanejeeves
(69,848 posts)3. Videos:
Fri Mar 11, 2022: On this day, March 11, 1939, Flaco Jimenez was born.
{snip}
The Texas Tornados:
Texas Tornados - "She's About A Mover" [Live from Austin, TX]
Live From Austin TX
81.9K subscribers
From the Texas Tornados album 'Live from Austin, TX' available now on CD and DVD:
https://www.livefromaustintx.com/
Also available at Amazon:
CD: http://amzn.to/2rl7Q9X
DVD: http://amzn.to/2swTkQH
Digital: http://amzn.to/2t6rYOi
Live From Austin TX
81.9K subscribers
From the Texas Tornados album 'Live from Austin, TX' available now on CD and DVD:
https://www.livefromaustintx.com/
Also available at Amazon:
CD: http://amzn.to/2rl7Q9X
DVD: http://amzn.to/2swTkQH
Digital: http://amzn.to/2t6rYOi
Whatever plans you had for the rest of the afternoon, cancel them now.
Flaco Jimenez - En Vivo (1976)
drcossnuevoleon
205K subscribers
654,491 views Feb 26, 2015
I do not own any rights to any of the songs in this video.
Music
SONG
Un Mojado Sin Licensia
ARTIST
Flaco Jiménez
ALBUM
The Best of Flaco Jiménez
drcossnuevoleon
205K subscribers
654,491 views Feb 26, 2015
I do not own any rights to any of the songs in this video.
Music
SONG
Un Mojado Sin Licensia
ARTIST
Flaco Jiménez
ALBUM
The Best of Flaco Jiménez
panader0
(25,816 posts)4. I really like The Texas Tornados. Doug Sahm had the Sir Douglas Quintet and the hit
'She's About a Mover'. About '72 I went to Belize for a bit and was surprised that everyone loved
Freddy Fender so much. Strange world. I bet I heard 'Wasted Days, Wasted Nights' a hundred times
in Belize City.