Featured In
ALBUMSeguimos De Pie - SingleT3r Elemento & Los Hijos De Garcia
Albums by T3r Elemento
ALBUMLa Divinidad FemeninaT3r Elemento
ALBUMExotic CorridosT3r Elemento
ALBUMOur Wave Nuestra OlaT3r Elemento
ALBUMGood Vibes Buenas VibrasT3r Elemento
ALBUMThe Green TripT3r Elemento
ALBUMUndergroundT3r Elemento
T3r Elemento's Popular Music Videos
Aerolínea Carrillo (feat. Gerardo Ortiz)
T3r Elemento
El De Las Dos Pistolas (feat. T3r Elemento & Los de la O)
Abraham Vazquez
Se Real (feat. T3r Elemento)
Oscar Cortez
Hierba de Receta (feat. T3r Elemento & Oscar Cortez)
Lenin Ramírez
Antes y Después De Ti
T3r Elemento
Con Tus Besos (En Vivo)
Eslabon Armado & T3r Elemento
Rafa Caro
T3r Elemento
Jalo y Exhalo (feat. Ruben Figueroa & David Bernal)
T3r Elemento
Yo Cuido DEL (feat. Oscar Cortez & Lenin Ramírez)
T3r Elemento
Rolling One (feat. T3r Elemento)
Lenin Ramírez
Artist Playlists
T3R Elemento Essentials
Snarling new voices of traditional Mexican corridos.
Artist Biography
T3r Elemento are part of a new crop of artists innovating corridos, narrative tracks traditionally associated with Mexico’s countryside. The Las Vegas-reared group (formed in 2015) have championed a sound called corridos verdes, or “green corridos,” a nod to their affinity for smoking cannabis. Much like the output from contemporaries like LEGADO 7 or Apple Music Up Next artist Natanael Cano, the group’s lyrics explore the theme of drugs mostly through the eyes of the consumer. However, they don’t shy away from more traditional narcocorrido stylings, as in 2017’s “Rafa Caro,” an open tribute to the founder of the Guadalajara cartel, Rafael Caro Quintero, a figure immortalized on screen by Tenoch Huerta in the Netflix series Narcos: Mexico). The group have also championed the sierreño sound in the vein of former fellow DEL Records artists like Gerardo Ortiz––with whom they collaborated on 2018’s “Aerolínea Carrillo,” another Quintero tribute––and the late Ariel Camacho, who is arguably responsible for spurring the style’s renaissance. The sound is minimalistic, most often characterized by two guitars and a tuba. T3r Elemento take that stripped-down sound and infuse it with raw, heart-on-sleeve lyrics about love on 2019’s “Mágicos Besitos,” weed-smoking on 2017’s “Fire Up,” and the quotidian struggles of Mexican-Americans in the Southwest U.S.—sanitizing in large measure the corrido sound’s blood-stained reputation.
Hometown
Las Vegas, NV, United States
Genre
Música Mexicana