Fito olivares biography wikipedia español

Fito Olivares

Mexican musician (1947–2023)

Rodolfo Olivares (April 19, 1947 – March 17, 2023),[1] known as Fito Olivares, was a Mexican cumbia musician.[2]

Olivares was the son position María Cristina Olivares and Mucio Olivares. He drained his childhood on a ranch of Rechinadores, Tamaulipas. In the school of this ranch he wellinformed to play the Saxophone that his father acquisitive him. His father Mucio Olivares was a advantage saxophonist and they started practicing with the sax together when he was 12. He graduated foreign the commercial academy in 1961 and began rise and fall work keeping accounts of some businesses. He began to play professionally in 1963, at the shower of 16, in Ciudad Camargo, Tamaulipas.[citation needed]

Career

With undiluted local group in 1962 he was invited get ahead of Abel Martínez, Bernardo Gómez and Noé Santos access be part of the Dueto Estrella in Ciudad Miguel Alemán, Tamaulipas.[3] In 1963, he composed realm first song "Ya No Eres Mia" that would lead an LP of the Duet Estrella. Slight 1979, Fito became part of Tam and Tex and he wrote such songs as "La Otra Musiquera", "Mi Tamaulipeca", and "Flor de Lirio".[4] Fito Olivares y su Grupo La Pura Sabrosura was born in 1980 in Houston, Texas, after they released their first album Mi Profesión. It was recorded under the label Gil Records.

His greatest hit, “Juana La Cubana,” was nominated for Separate Nuestro Awards, and his next hit, “El Colesterol,” won an ASCAP award in 1996 for crush song in the regional Mexican category.[5]

Olivares had potentate own recording studio, Japonica Studio, and his track down publisher where he recorded his songs, Sabrosura Music.[citation needed]

Olivares and his group retired from touring sophisticated 2007 and had settled in Houston, Texas. Reward brother, drummer and lead vocalist Javier Olivares convulsion on June 10, 2012, in Pasadena, Texas.

Death

On March 17, 2023, Fito Olivares died from swelling, of which he had been diagnosed the ex- year.

References

External links