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Everybody thought they knew everything that

was happening [in L.A.’s music scene], and here’s

this band from just over the river that no one

had ever heard of, blowing everybody’s mind.

–Steve Berlin recalling Los Lobos’

early days in east L.A.

outright stole a nascent Los Lobos song,

which became “All Around the World or

the Myth of Fingerprints.”

en came

La Bamba

, the biopic

about rock prodigy Ritchie Valens,

whose life ended on the infamous “Day

the Music Died”—the small-plane crash

in February

that took the lives of

all four men on board, also including

Buddy Holly. Valens was just . e

lm about Valens’s sudden fame

and early death is named, of course,

a er his huge hit of the same title, which

he adapted from a Mexican folk song.

With Berlin producing, Los Lobos pro-

vided the lion’s—er,

wolf ’s

share of the

double-platinum soundtrack, comprised

largely of the band’s covers of Valens

songs, from “La Bamba” to “Come On,

Let’s Go!”

“When we went into the whole

La

Bamba

experience, we had no expecta-

tions,” Berlin re ects. “It had a rst-time

director and people [in the cast] who

had never been in anything before. It

was about a kid who died at , who’d

written a total of songs in his whole

life. So none of that screamed ‘interna-

tional blockbuster’ to any of us. When

you think about it, it’s amazing it hap-

pened. We never thought it was going to

be a big deal.”

But the lm was a surprise hit, and

Los Lobos’ version of the title song

began ying up the charts. Ironically,

the band was on tour in Europe at the

time, missing the

Bamba

fever as it

kept climbing in the States. “ is was

pre-internet, and phone calls were really

expensive,” Berlin says. “So we’re hear-

ing, ‘You’re top

,’ ‘top ,’ ‘top ,’ and

we’re like, ‘ at’s bullshit. How could

that really be?’ Seriously, we did not

believe it. By the time we came home,

we were in the top or something like

that. e whole thing was surreal.”

It probably seemed almost as impos-

sible for a Spanish-language song to soar

up the US charts in

as it did three

decades earlier. But when the single

eventually hit the top spot, Valens was

posthumously credited with a num-

ber-one songwriting hit. Suddenly Los

Lobos had a much higher pro le, which

led to some strange bedfellows on the

road.

ey opened for U during that

band’s

Joshua Tree

heyday, an experience

that somewhat recalled the band’s ex-

perience years earlier at the Olympic

Auditorium. e U crowds were o en

rude, Berlin says. “It was remarkable,

how stupid their fans could be. We were

doing what we do, playing our combina-

tion of rock with this and that, but those

people just wanted to hear U . I can’t

say it’s that unusual. Opening for ZZ

Top wasn’t too dissimilar.”

One place they’ve never had any

trouble is Chicago, which Berlin refers

to as “more home than home. It’s our

best market by far, beyond a shadow of a

doubt. WXRT is a big part of it, frankly;

they’ve always been in our corner. And

we’ve had some remarkably cool shows

in the city, at Navy Pier and various

festivals, and of course at Ravinia too.

Chicago just brings the best out of us.”

Pressed for other hotspots, Berlin cites

the San Francisco Bay Area, but adds,

“We’re lucky. We can go anywhere and

people kind of like it.”

ey’ve won plenty of fans among

their peers as well. Los Lobos has a long

list of collaborations—one of its most

recent is an EP made with e Shins for

Record Store Day (released April ).

And they’re just about to sign with the

label created by Dan Auerbach (best

known as guitarist and vocalist of e

Black Keys), with an aim to record in

the studio sometime in June.

Asked whom the band might still

want to work with that they haven’t,

Berlin allows, “ at’s a tough one.

We’ve crossed most of them o already.”

For him, Los Lobos’ th-anniversary

celebration,

The Ride

, is responsible for

ticking many of those boxes. It mixed

original tracks with new recordings of

early Lobos songs—and a top-drawer

list of guest musicians, including Rubén

Blades and Elvis Costello. “If you had

a magic wand and could say who you’d

want to work with, that record was

The

Ride

,” he observes. “Bobby Womack,

Tom Waits, Mavis Staples—I mean,

everybody who was on that thing was

someone we really, really wanted to

work with. at whole experience was

pretty great.”

Looking back over the course of

a lifelong career, is there any advice

today’s Steve Berlin would give to his

younger self? “Be nicer,” he chuckles. “I

was kind of an asshole for a few decades

there. If I wasn’t so full of myself, I’d

probably have more friends. … And I’d

probably have gotten a written con-

tract from Paul Simon before we did

Graceland

, that’d be one thing I’d go

back and change!”

But in a split second, he adjusts

perspective. “Seriously, I’ve been very

lucky,” Berlin says. “I’ve had a very rich

life and career, doing pretty much ex-

actly what I want to be doing. We’ve had

our ups and downs, but the simple fact

that we’ve persevered this long means

we’re doing something right.”

Web Behrens covers arts, culture, and travel for the

Chicago Tribune

and

Crain’s Chicago Business

.

He’s also worked as an editor and contributor for

Time Out Chicago

and the

Chicago Reader

.

RAVINIA MAGAZINE | JUNE 1 – JUNE 17, 2018

34