Performance

Monthly Listeners

Current

Followers

Current

Streams

Current

Tracks

Current

Popularity

Current

Top Releases

View All

Antología De Los Chichos (Remasteriza...

122.7M streams

122,742,186

40 + 1 Aniversario 1973-2014

72.3M streams

72,252,723

Ni Más, Ni menos

30.7M streams

30,670,000

Lo Mejor De Los Chichos

28M streams

27,987,623

Bailaras Con Alegria (Remastered 2005)

23.7M streams

23,740,182

Yo El Vaquilla

23.7M streams

23,724,246

Yo El Vaquilla (Remastered 2005)

16.1M streams

16,063,402

Esto Sí Que Tiene Guasa (Remastered 2...

12.7M streams

12,685,483

Amor De Compra Y Venta

12.4M streams

12,359,976

Hoy Igual Que Ayer (Remastered 2005)

10.1M streams

10,144,811

Biography

Los Chicos are a popular rhumba band from Spain whose legacy spans several decades and whose success peaked during the early to mid-'80s. The band's musical style evolved over the years, fusing rhumba flamenca with pop/rock to varying degrees, and was often compared to that of Los Chunguitos, a similarly popular rhumba band of the same era. Founded in 1973 in Madrid, Spain, the band was originally a trio comprised of vocalist, Spanish guitarist, and songwriter Juan Antonio Jiménez (aka Jeros; born March 29, 1951, in Valladolid, Spain), plus brothers Emilio González (born December 11, 1947, in Madrid) and Julio González (born March 19, 1952, in Madrid), backing vocalists who would develop into contributing songwriters over the years. After signing a recording contract with Philips, Los Chicos made their full-length album debut in 1974 with Ni Más ni Menos. Throughout the remainder of the decade the band released a new album each year: Esto Sí Que Tiene Guasa (1975), No Sé por Qué (1976), Son Ilusiones (1977), Hoy Igual Que Ayer (1978), and Amor y Ruleta (1979). Their popularity peaked during the early to mid-'80s, when they released the albums Amor de Compra y Venta (1980), Bailarás con Alegría (1981), Ni Tú ni Yo (1982), Déjame Solo (1983), Adelante (1984), and Yo el Vaquilla (1985). Los Chicos subsequently took a year-long break before closing out the decade with Porque Nos Queremos (1987), Ojos Negros (1988), and Esto Es Lo Que Hay (1990), their final few albums to feature Jiménez, who split from the group and embarked on a solo career. Jiménez, who had released the one-off collaborative album Sevillanas (1987) on Philips with a group called Egipto, released the solo albums Tembló, Pero No Calló (1990) and Agua y Veneno (1991) before killing himself on October 22, 1995, at age 44 in Madrid. The popularity of Los Chicos had declined during the late '80s as the band's relationship with Jiménez had become increasingly problematic. After his departure from the band in 1990, Los Chicos regrouped, adding Emilio's son Emilio Gonzalez (aka Júnior) in the place of Jiménez and releasing the albums Sangre Gitana (1991), ¡Amigos, No Pasa Ná! (1994), and Gitano (1996). A five-year break followed before Los Chicos returned once again with the albums Ladrón de Amores (2001) and Cabibi (2002) on Mercury Records. Universal Music subsequently reissued the back catalog of Los Chicos with remastered sound quality in 2005 and released the best-of compilation Hasta Aquí Hemos Llegado in 2008. ~ Jason Birchmeier, Rovi