For years, Linda Escobar had been
unable to shake off "The Little Princess" image.
"That’s because I began my musical
career singing "Frijolitos Pintos," at the tender age
of seven," the statuesque songbird said during an
interview that began at the Hispanic Entertainment
Archives and ended at Gilbert’s Restaurant where she
was accompanied by Lydia Herrera, who with her husband
Henry, owned Benny’s BarBQ in Corpus Christi.
After the 1960 Cometa Records hit,
six more tunes, including "Colorcito de Sandia" were
included in her father, Eligio Escobar’s Bernal BELP
2006 long-play album. It about during this period
Beatriz Llamas would babysit Escobar when her father
was onstage. Then, in what seemed to be the blink of
an eye, El Gordo Delgado had the then 11-year-old
Alice, Texas native booked at the Hollywood Palladium
and on tour with José Alfredo Jiménez, Lucha Villa,
Resortes and The Dinos, than featuring Bobby Lira and
Serafino Perales.
Years passed and at the end of the
last century she fell in love with Kenji "El Gato"
Katsube.
"We’re like rice and beans," the
Escobar Records recording artist said during that
period. "He’s the rice and I’m the beans" referring to
the Japanese being known for eating rice and Mexicans
for eating beans. "And our children will probably be
frijolitos pintos.
Her father had prophesized this
during her youth and she even wound up going to the
Land of the Rising Sun, where they performed at Al Sur
De La Frontera in Osaka, Japan. During that winter
trip, Katsube took her to a hot springs and as she
remembers, "I had a hard time finding a bathing suit
because their women are so tiny."
They wrote their own wedding rites,
Tony De La Rosa had agreed to perform at their wedding
and all the padrinos were already chosen when
Katsube was diagnosed with cancer and he succumbed to
the fatal disease on May 16, 2003. The next year, she
wrote and released "Llorando En Silencio," which
features an enigmatic piece of artwork for the cover.
She followed that up with four more productions on her
own label.
Today, after suffering great
tragedy, her life-long fans look at the grandmother of
four and still see the stereotype of that little girl
they saw grow before their very eyes.
"I was always very conservative,"
the 5-feet-8-inch tall songstress said. "I wouldn’t do
anything out of the norm, but that was the
rancherona in me. Besides, I am truly shy when it
comes to dressing in a revealing way.
"It was Chente Barrera who wanted
for the other side of me to come out. He wanted me to
come out of the cage, be more assertive, stand my
ground, not take any crap from anyone and to show what
I’ve got because, as Shirley Temple, I was a child
star and everyone stayed with that image.
"I never had a chance to come out,"
Escobar added.
That was the basis and concept for
"Leona Enjablada" ("The Caged Lioness") to free that
pent up spirit. As we listened to each song, La
Diva de la Canción offered a brief synopsis of
each tune.
In the Barrera penned "Quedate
Tranquilo," she is telling her former beau, "Don’t
worry because I’m out of your life."
"I did ‘La Monja’ because I like to
include a corridor in every CD and it’s my favorite
Mingo Saldivar song," Escobar explained.
She recorded Chelo Sílva’s torchy
"¿Sabes De Qué Tengo Ganas?" with the same original
arrangement in what probably is the best tune in this
album.
After seducing her listeners with
the aforementioned sensuous number, she turns around
and throws darts at all men with "Hombres Malvados," a
tune made famous by Paquita la del Barrio.
Then there’s "Colorcito de Sandia,"
which is a flashback to the past – 41 years to be
exact. She recorded the Christian-oriented "Tango
Lento" to remind fans of God. And the closing tune,
"Stonewall Jackson Blues," by Rosa Canales Pérez, is a
rocking bilingual tune that should garner some airplay
on English-language radio stations.
Needless to say, the very
youthful-looking, shapely warbler was a big hit at
this year’s Tejano Music Festival during which she
brought Kenji’s squeezebox and bajo sexto player,
Noriyoshi "Honorio" Imamura, a former member of
Kasube’s group and now leader of Conjunto J, did
Escobar the honor of playing Kenji’s accordion and
singing a couple of duets with the diva.
For more information on the 2003
Tejano Roots Hall of Fame inductee, go to
www.myspace.com/lindaescobarysuconjunto.