Quique Escamilla

Quique Escamilla (born December 18, 1980) is a Mexican-Canadian, multi-instrumentalist musician, singer-songwriter, producer, who won the Juno Award for World Music Album of the Year at the Juno Awards of 2015 with his first full-length and self-produced album, 500 Years of Night.[1]

Quique Escamilla
Background information
Born (1980-12-18) December 18, 1980
Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Chiapas, Mexico
GenresFolk, Rock, World
Occupation(s)Musician
singer-songwriter
producer
InstrumentsElectric guitar, voice, drums, bass
Years active1994–present
Websitequiqueescamilla.com

Escamilla also won a Canadian Folk Music Award for World Music Solo Artist of the Year at the 10th Canadian Folk Music Awards in 2014.[2]

Early years

Born and raised in Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Chiapas, Mexico.[3] He began playing and making music in the early 1990s as a teenager.[3] He first learned to sing traditional Mexican ballads his mother taught him as a young kid. Eventually he taught himself how to play guitar and formed his first rock band at 14 years old, which covered punk rock and heavy metal songs. In his early twenties he became interested in playing all kinds of music, from blues, reggae, jazz, to pop and world music. He moved and lived in Mexico City for a couple of years before moving to Canada in December 2007—settling in Toronto, Ontario.

Albums

He recorded, mixed, mastered and produced his self-titled debut EP in his Toronto bedroom. That EP was released in Toronto, along with a live concert recorded by CBC Radio One's Canada Live at Lula Lounge in January 2012. The recording from this concert was featured on CBC's Big City Small World.

He followed up with a studio production on 500 Years of Night in April 2014. Such album represented a political statement from Escamilla. At his live shows, he has stated his support towards the oppressed indigenous people who struggle against racism in his "homeland of Chiapas, the rest of Mexico, and across the Americas". His album's commentary also sounds strongly influenced by the message and struggle of the Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN). Its booklet included a powerful photo collection of the Chiapas' movement, taken by the renowned Mexican photographer, Marco Antonio Cruz—winner of the Grange Prize in Canada and photography director of the political magazine Proceso in Mexico City.

Escamilla has toured extensively across Canada since 2012. In 2016 he debuted in Europe doing four consecutive tours the same year, including Italy, France, Spain, Belgium, and the Netherlands.

He has performed and appeared at international music conferences such as Folk Alliance International in Kansas City, US (2015 and 2016), Mundial Montreal (2012), and the World Music Expo (2016), in Santiago de Compostela, Spain. [4]

At the 2013 Interstellar Rodeo, he performed with Jim Cuddy and Danny Michel as part of a one-off supergroup billed as the Interstellar All-Stars.[5]

In more recent years, he has appeared at major, international folk, blues and jazz festivals, sharing stages with world-class artists of diverse genres such as Los Lobos, Michael Franti, Gustavo Santaolalla, Cyril Neville and the Royal Southern Brotherhood, Mokoomba, Calypso Rose, Bonnie Raitt, Serena Ryder, Ron Sexsmith, Kobo Town, Alabama Shakes, Alex Cuba, Buffy Sainte-Marie, Fred Penner, Los Texmaniacs and Puerto Candelaria.

He performed for the first time at the Montréal International Jazz Festival in July 2016.

Discography

References

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