A new chapter in the history of bachata began in 1987 when Blas Duran introduced modern stylistic innovations like the electric guitar and multi-track recording. Luis Vargas was the first of a group of bachateros, all from the Northern Dominican frontier with Haiti, who followed Durán’s lead to take advantage of the commercial viability brought to bachata by the new, more modern sound.
Before Vargas, the frontier, or “la linea”, had not been known for producing noted guitar musicians1. Duran is from Nagua, a resort town north of San Francisco de Macoris, and many of the important bachateros of the acoustic requinto era were from the campos around San Francisco or Nagua. La linea, however, had been the province of merengue tipico, traditional merengue played with guira, tambora and accordion. It is significant that bachateros from the frontier, like Vargas and his great rival, Antony Santos, became popular when merengue played on the guitar was in the ascendant after Durán’s bachata-merengue hit: “Consejo a las mujeres”.
While Vargas’ music is the product of several different influences, his early career cannot be separated from that of Blas Durán. Like Durán, Vargas’s recordings from the late 1980s contain more merengues de guitarra than bachata proper, and the lyrics are invariably sexual double-entendres (doble sentido). The guitar introductions on early Luis Vargas songs like “El zapatero” and “La maravilla” are clearly inspired by the introductions of Blas Duran’s guitarist Jesus Martinez. Vargas’ style comes from a variety of sources, however, and he had clearly learned much from the guitar merengues of Eladio Romero Santos, always popular in the Dominican countryside.
Vargas began recording bachata as early as 1982, singing in a sobbing baritone style which echoed both that of Luis Segura and that of his predecessor on the frontier, Victor Estevez. It was not until the late 1980s, however, that Vargas gained widespread popularity with his new style of merengue de guitarra, which was neither orchestra based, like Durán’s, nor as rustic as Romero Santos’. It was also with these first merengues that he made his real impact on bachata. Numbers like “El machetazo” from 1988’s “El tomate” helped to begin a revolution in the genre. Vargas gained his first large-scale commercial success with his album “La maravilla”, released in 1989. The album’s hit number was a bachata called “La traicionera”, which switched back and forth between bachata and merengue, while delivering some of the bawdiest lyrics ever heard in the genre.
In Luis Vargas’ early bachatas, like “La traicionera” and “Esa mujer”, we begin to hear the merengue influenced characteristics of the frontier bachateros which would so impact modern bachata. The bongo began to be played with sticks rather than hands, and in rhythms with characteristics borrowed from merengue. The lead guitar, also, played merengue figures over the bolero rhythm of the music. The sobbing baritone vocal style of Vargas and other frontier bachateros also came to characterize the genre.
In 1990, Antony Santos left Vargas’ group, where he played guira, to form his own, and for personal and professional reasons the two became bitter rivals. Real though it was, Vargas was quick to exploit the rivalry for commercial reasons. While Santos, on his way to undisputed commercial supremacy, was generally content to ignore Vargas, most of Vargas’ recordings began to include at least one song which poked fun at his rival. One of these, “El envidioso”, became a major hit. At the same time, Vargas was curbing his use of “doble sentido”, sexual double entendre. Santos and another frontier bachatero, Raulin Rodriguez, first demonstrated the enormous commercial potential of the modern electric style when coupled with lyrics which were romantic rather than bawdy. Luis Vargas soon followed their example - parting company with Blas Durán, who continued to record doble sentido. Vargas’ greatest commercial success came from the romantic, although certainly rough-and-tumble, bachata, “Loco de amor”, in 1992.
In the same recording as “Loco de amor”, Vargas remade a Colombian vallenato, “Cenizas frias”, and he repeated this formula several years later with “Volvió el dolor” (1997), a song which came to be, along with “Loco de amor”, his anthem. The success of “El dolor” inspired other bachateros to look to Colombia for material. An entire generation has followed in Vargas’ footsteps, with Monchy y Alexandra and their guitarist, Martires de Leon, leading the way in adapting vallenatos to the bachata format.
Vargas’ star has dimmed since “Volvió el dolor”. Although he is certainly one of the pioneers of modern bachata, Vargas has not shown the same talent as his great rival, Antony Santos, for adapting to the changes the genre has undergone. While his recent recordings have had some success with his already established audience, he is no longer considered, as he was for many years, one of bachata’s premier acts. He continues to perform in the Dominican Republic and New York City, and to record new material; but he is generally known for past hits like “El dolor” and “Loco de amor”.
1. Notable exceptions are Julio Angel, the author of “El Salon”, who is a native of Santiago, Rodriguez, and Victor Estevez, of Castañuelas.
-- David Wayne
me encanta tu musica eres el mejor .................... cuidate,,,,,,,,,,,, muchisimas vendiciones para ti y tu familia me encanta tu bajista es bello me lo saluda
unos de los mejores en el genero bachata y espero que alhun dia yo pueda estrechar su mano. zoespot.com
luis tu eres el mejor bachatero k hai solo te farta mejor promocion digo eto por antoni santo si toca ata en el monte lo graban ilo sacan ala calle el mejor promotor k puede aber es el pirata por le lleba la misica al pueblo ma rapido k la diskera tu necesita un promotor k te grave tu precentacione ila meta ala calle en cd odvd
EL SAPATERO
me encantan tu bachatas me gusta tu estilo no necesitas imital a nadie porque tuestilo esta muy bien que Dios te bendiga siempre y te ofresca todo lo que tu le pida siempre y cuando el pience que es bueno para ti recuerda que Dios solo da lo que auno le combiene no lo olvides
Eres realmente el creador de la bachata moderna a ti se debe el que todos ests bachatero de ahora sean millonario, que dios te siga dando la oportunidad de sequir creando todas esas musica con sentimientos ....
creo q es muy bueno y querido pero no deve crear o inventar algo distinto a su famosa y gustosa bachata clasica original y sienpre deve mantener su estilo de conponer cantar y tocar la gitarra de la manera unica q solo el sabe aser
hola luis tu eres un artista con mucho tanlento que dios te guie siempre por buen camino para traer al mundo la alegria que tanta fralta le hace dios te bendiga hoy y siempre LUIS MILADYS PHILADELPHIA USA
LUIS TU ERES EL MAS PESAO DE LA BACHATA,ANTONY NO TE LLEGA A LOS TOBILLOS,EL SOLO ES UN VIRALATA CALVO.A EL QUE APRENDA MAS DE TI Y QUE COJA NOTA..
Luis tu tiene un talento que toca el publico.Mejor que tu no hay nadie...sigue en lo tuyo que ta bien.
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