Metro Balderas (song)
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"Metro Balderas", as it is generally known, or for its original name, "Estación del metro Balderas" ("Balderas subway station"), is a song by Mexican rock musician Rodrigo "Rockdrigo" González, which refers to a man looking for a woman who got lost in the crowd at
Mexico City Metro The Mexico City Metro ( es, Metro de la Ciudad de México) is a rapid transit system that serves the metropolitan area of Mexico City, including some municipalities in Mexico State. Operated by the Sistema de Transporte Colectivo (STC), it is ...
station
Metro Balderas Balderas is an underground station on the Mexico City Metro. It is located in the Cuauhtémoc borough in the center of Mexico City. It is a transfer station along Lines 1 and 3. Name and iconography The station receives its name from the nea ...
. This song, along with other González's songs such as ''Distante instante'' and ''Balada del asalariado,'' can be found in the album ''Hurbanistorias'', recorded in 1984. These songs are available online at González's official website. González had enormous influence on Mexican rock bands, such as El Tri and
Botellita de Jerez Botellita de Jerez was a Mexican rock band, formed in Mexico City in 1982. Their music is a fusion of rock, cumbia, and Mexican traditional music like mariachi and son, creating the genre called guacarrock (rock and guacamole). The band was always ...
; his songs have been recorded many times, especially after his death. In 2003, a tribute album was recorded by the name "Ofrenda a Rockdrigo" ("An offering to Rockdrigo"). A plaque on Balderas subway station was placed on September 19, 2004 to remember Rockdrigo on the nineteenth anniversary of his death, at 34, when his apartment building collapsed during the big earthquake of 1985 in
Mexico City Mexico City ( es, link=no, Ciudad de México, ; abbr.: CDMX; Nahuatl: ''Altepetl Mexico'') is the capital and largest city of Mexico, and the most populous city in North America. One of the world's alpha cities, it is located in the Valley o ...
.


Contents of the song

The original song is built as the monologue of an alienated subject hijacking a subway train, with lines such as: ''Get lost from here, mister engineer,'' ''this is a hijack, I'll drive the train.'' .. ''You better pay attention or I'll shoot you,'' ''haven't you noticed how upset I am?'' .. Once the hijacker's character has been defined, his motivations are eventually revealed and the repeated as a choir all along the song: ''Four years ago I lost my girlfriend'' ''in these crowds that form here.'' .. ''I looked for her at platforms and waiting rooms,'' ''but she just got lost in Balderas station.'' .. ''It was in Balderas subway station,'' .. ''...there a wave of people took her away'' .. ''...there I lost my love'' .. ''...Darling, I searched for you in every train.'' .. The Balderas subway station, as the downtown crossing of the oldest subway line (Line 1) with the longest one (Line 3), has been known for years for its excessive crowds where people gets easily lost, so the story actually makes plenty of poetic sense for local listeners. Even if searching four years for a lost girlfriend at a subway station, let alone hijacking a subway train because of it, are unlikely situations, there is located most of the poetic and ironic force of this song; by exaggerating the loneliness and despair of an individual whose emotional life is run over and ignored by the metropolis, gets to put them more in sight. That subject is far from new; Rockdrigo was fond of universal literature and must have been influenced by some of the many authors who have explored the loneliness of individual in the big city. His intimate and tragicomic tone can be understood in many cultures; but his language is plain and definitely local, ''
chilango ''Chilango'' () is a Mexican slang demonym for natives and residents of Mexico City. The Royal Spanish Academy and the Mexican Academy of Language give the definition of the word as referring to something "belonging to Mexico City", in particular ...
'' (that is, rooted in
Mexico City Mexico City ( es, link=no, Ciudad de México, ; abbr.: CDMX; Nahuatl: ''Altepetl Mexico'') is the capital and largest city of Mexico, and the most populous city in North America. One of the world's alpha cities, it is located in the Valley o ...
), to the point that Rockdrigo was compared with the popular songwriter, singer and urban chronicler Chava Flores, who always used Mexican vernacular music forms and never came even close to having been a rock musician. Despite the differences of age, generation and style between Chava Flores and Rockdrigo we should say that, at that time, such language and subjects were very innovative in Mexican rock, which until then had been confined between translated American and British covers, dancing rhythms, love ballads, some misunderstood virtuosism and a lot of semi-clandestine young protest. Until the mid-1980s, most conservative groups of Mexican society were wary of Rock because of its load of rebellion and protest, so only artists who wrote mostly about love and used "acceptable" music forms usually tended to prosper. On the other hand, liberal groups, left and intellectuals were also wary of Rock because it was considered an aggression against Mexicanity and a by-product of Imperialism. Maybe the most important contribution by Rockdrigo in his lifetime was to show some kind of compatibility between Chava Flores and
Bob Dylan Bob Dylan (legally Robert Dylan, born Robert Allen Zimmerman, May 24, 1941) is an American singer-songwriter. Often regarded as one of the greatest songwriters of all time, Dylan has been a major figure in popular culture during a career sp ...
.


Covers and versions

The original version album, ''Hurbanistorias'' (1984), was not commercially distributed until a long time after Rockdrigo González was dead; in the mid-1980s, it could only be found in a few music stores, at the
Tianguis Cultural del Chopo The Tianguis Cultural del Chopo is a Saturday flea market (''tianguis'' in Mexican Spanish) near Mexico City downtown, known locally as ''El Chopo''. It is named after its original location which was near the Museo Universitario del Chopo, an a ...
, in such marginal places or in some almost clandestine way. The darkness, slow rhythm and almost ascetic instrumentation of his "rupestre" style (Rockdrigo was dubbed as "the Mexican Bob Dylan"), contributed along with the difficulty in finding copies for the original version to be scarcely known at that time. Meanwhile, the veteran band Three Souls in my Mind reappeared in 1985 realigned, renamed as El Tri, with a new recording company and a much wider commercial reach. Their album "Simplemente", better arranged, produced and sold than all its precedents, was able to touch a broader audience, at the beginning of what came to be a craving frenzy for rock in Spanish. As El Tri recorded Metro Balderas and featured it in their album ''
Simplemente Simplemente (Galician or Spanish for "simply") may refer to: * ''Simplemente'' (Chayanne album), 2001 ** "Simplemente", the album's title track * ''Simplemente'' (El Tri album), 1984 See also

* {{Disambiguation ...
'', that came to be the most known version of this song. Music remained without essential changes, even though in the original version Rockdrigo was accompanied only by his guitar and harmonica; El Tri arranged it for a whole rock band, plus a saxophone, giving it a faster, more rocker, more attractive and less intimate rhythm. It is in the lyrics where significant changes can be found, which, rather than just a cover, make it a different version. Changes are such that copyright for the song in ''Simplemente'' is credited to González ''and'' Alejandro Lora, leader, vocalist and guitar player of El Tri. So, many people often think that "Metro Balderas" is an original song by El Tri; same happens with other songs by Rockdrigo, such as ''Asalto chido'', recorded by
Botellita de Jerez Botellita de Jerez was a Mexican rock band, formed in Mexico City in 1982. Their music is a fusion of rock, cumbia, and Mexican traditional music like mariachi and son, creating the genre called guacarrock (rock and guacamole). The band was always ...
. The most significant changes in the El Tri version are: 1. Original version was named "Estación del metro Balderas", but El Tri version is just "Metro Balderas": 2. All lines about the hijacking, including menaces to the engineer, and the vague and humorous Freudian quote, were suppressed. There are no more "platforms" or "waiting rooms". All references to a train or a train station disappear. 3. Interlocution is no longer to a "Mister Engineer" (''"señor operador",'' as a train driver would be respectfully called), but to a ''chauffeur''; this word ("''chofer''") is only used for taxi, bus or truck drivers. Then again, "Balderas station" is replaced by "Metro Balderas". So it seems that the story is no longer situated inside the tunnels, but at street level; the individual is not travelling on the subway, but in a taxi, a bus or a truck. 4. "Metro Hidalgo", as in the original version, is a centric subway station on Line 3, very close to Balderas. El Tri replaces "take me to Hidalgo or wherever you want" for new, more distant places, as "La Villa", "la San Simón", "Copilco", "Contreras", "La Curva" or "la Escandón". The inclusion of new places by El Tri adds a new hyperbolic twist to the story: La Villa and
Copilco Copilco was an important Mesoamerican ceremonial center, southwest of Mexico City, Mexico. Copilco is located approximately four kilometers north of Cuicuilco. Both were covered by lava from several eruptions of the Xitle volcano three thousand ...
are in both extremes of the very long Line 3 (22 kilometers). La Villa can be reached one station before the northern end of the line (
Metro Indios Verdes Indios Verdes (; Spanish ) is a station of the Mexico City Metro along Insurgentes Norte Avenue in the ''colonias'' (neighborhoods) of Residencial Zacatenco and Santa Isabel Tola, in Gustavo A. Madero, Mexico City. It is an at-grade stati ...
) and Copilco is located one station before the southern end ( Metro Universidad). There seems to be an intention in mentioning the stations located just before both ends, but is feasible to consider that "Indios Verdes" and "Universidad" have too long names to fit into the metrics of the song. Besides, none of the other places mentioned fit with an existing subway station. San Simón and Escandón neighborhoods are rather far away from Balderas; Contreras, an outskirt area beside wooded mountains, is almost the opposite to Downtown. "La Curva" was a popular beer saloon at the Del Valle neighborhood, highly praised by El Tri in another song of the same album, specially written for it. 5. Some lines saying "there I lost my love" were replaced by "there remained the trace of our love". 6. What got "smeared" at Balderas was "my reputation", instead of "my heart". To be "smeared" ("''embarrado''") in
Mexico City Mexico City ( es, link=no, Ciudad de México, ; abbr.: CDMX; Nahuatl: ''Altepetl Mexico'') is the capital and largest city of Mexico, and the most populous city in North America. One of the world's alpha cities, it is located in the Valley o ...
slang can be used as "to be run over", but also in the same sense of calumny it can have in English ("to be the subject of a calumny"), or as "to be accused of being involved in some dirty issue", so this new sense can be feasible, according to the end of the song. 7. What makes all this coherent is revealed to the listener in the last verse, where El Tri says: ''Fue en la estación del metro Balderas,'' ''ahí fue donde ella se metió al talón.'' That is, in
Mexico City Mexico City ( es, link=no, Ciudad de México, ; abbr.: CDMX; Nahuatl: ''Altepetl Mexico'') is the capital and largest city of Mexico, and the most populous city in North America. One of the world's alpha cities, it is located in the Valley o ...
slang: ''It was there, at Balderas subway,'' ''where she entered into prostitution.'' Argentine band
Los Enanitos Verdes Enanitos Verdes (literal translation: "Little green dwarves", roughly equivalent to the English phrase "Little green men") is a rock trio from Argentina, formed in 1979 in the city of Mendoza. History The band started in 1979, with Marciano ...
made a cover of the El Tri version in 1998 for their '' Tracción Acústica'' album. In the 1980s, a Mexican Rock band, "Grupo Dama" recorded a cover of this song.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Metro Balderas (Song) 1982 songs Spanish-language songs