Zayda y los Culpables explained

Zayda y los Culpables
Background:group_or_band
Genre:Regional Mexican, Norteño, Tejano
Years Active:1996 - 2007

Zayda y los Culpables (English: Zayda and the Guilty Ones) were a Regional Mexican band. They were famous for their romantic cumbias and ballads about love and loss. The song "Tiro de Gracia" (Coup de Grâce), describing a failed relationship,[1] was one of the most popular songs from the band.[2] The song "De Contrabando" was first recorded by the band and years later became a hit record for Mexican-American singer Jenni Rivera.

Death of Zayda Peña Arjona

Zayda Peña Arjona (March 5, 1981 - December 1, 2007) was the lead singer of Zayda y Los Culpables.

Shortly before midnight on December 1, 2007, an unknown gunman shot Peña in the back at Mónaco Motel in Matamoros, Tamaulipas, across the U.S.-Mexico border from Brownsville, Texas. Two other people — a friend of Peña and a motel employee — were also shot. Both died at the scene.[3] Paramedics took Zayda to Alfredo Pumarejo Hospital in Matamoros, where doctors determined that her injuries were not fatal. Physicians placed Peña in emergency surgery in order to remove the bullet.[4]

The next day, several assailants entered the hospital, roaming the corridors.[3] Once they were able to find Zayda, the assailants went in and shot her again in the chest at point blank range to ensure her death. The Dallas Morning News stated that the fatal bullet pierced her back;[5] The Independent and Reuters[6] stated that the fatal bullet hit her face.[2] She was 26 years old.

Her mother, Blanca Aidé Arjona, works in the office of a public prosecutor as of 2007.[4]

The death of Peña, who had no known connections to traffickers or any criminal activity, and did not write or perform songs about traffickers,[1] has instilled fear and great concern in many Mexican performers.[2]

Discography

All of the albums are under the Discos Musart label.

Greatest hits albums

Notes and References

  1. "Assassinations shock Mexican musicians", The Guardian
  2. Doyle, Leonard, "Singers slain as Mexico's drug cartels target popular stars," The Independent, December 6, 2007
  3. "Singer shot to death after surgery in Matamoros ER," Houston Chronicle, December 4, 2007
  4. "Zayda Peña Arjona Shot and Killed," People, December 3, 2007
  5. "Mexican singer Zayda Pena slain in hospital," The Dallas Morning News, December 3, 2007
  6. "Slain Mexico singers compete from grave for Grammy," Reuters