ALBUMLa Chica Perfecta - SingleLos Invasores de Nuevo León
Albums by Los Invasores de Nuevo León
ALBUMCoincidenciaLos Invasores de Nuevo León
ALBUMDiplomatic InvasionLos Invasores de Nuevo León
ALBUMCorridos de Ayer y HoyLos Invasores de Nuevo León
ALBUM40 Aniversario Con Invitados a Otro Nivel, Vol. 2Los Invasores de Nuevo León
ALBUMEL Preso De Nuevo LeonLos Invasores de Nuevo León
ALBUMDel Corazón a la PielLos Invasores de Nuevo León
ALBUM2 en 1Los Invasores de Nuevo León
ALBUMLa DespedidaLos Invasores de Nuevo León
ALBUMAmistadesLos Invasores de Nuevo León
ALBUMAferrado Al AmorLos Invasores de Nuevo León
Los Invasores de Nuevo León's Popular Music Videos
Bajo Mil Llaves (feat. Carin Leon) [En Vivo]
Los Invasores de Nuevo León
Playa Sola - Los Invasores de Nuevo León (feat. Banda MS de Sergio Lizárraga)
Los Invasores de Nuevo León
La Mejor de Mis Tragedias - Los Invasores D e Nuevo León
Los Invasores de Nuevo León
Médico de Barra
Los Invasores de Nuevo León
Los Invasores de Nuevo León Oficial - Llegó Para Quedarse (Video Oficial)
Los Invasores de Nuevo León
Laurita Garza
Los Invasores de Nuevo León
Que No Se Apague la Lumbre (feat. El Mimoso Luis Antonio López)
Los Invasores de Nuevo León
Total Ya Se Fue (En Vivo)
Los Invasores de Nuevo León
No Me Arrepiento de Nada
Los Invasores de Nuevo León
Gracias Porque Volviste (En Vivo)
Los Invasores de Nuevo León
Artist Playlists
Los Invasores de Nuevo León Essentials
This legacy norteño group created a blueprint for the genre.
Artist Biography
Los Invasores de Nuevo León had their first hit in 1982 with “Mi Casa Nueva,” a song that established them as both peerless purveyors of norteño music and poets of longing, loneliness, and disappointed love. The group was formed in 1978 in Monterrey, Mexico, by vocalist Lalo Mora; a local radio station ran a contest to name the band, and the winner received a serenade. The group initially played private parties, but that changed with the release of “Mi Casa Nueva”; 1982’s Laurita Garza became their first gold record. The titular corrido told the mournful story of a spurned schoolteacher who eventually kills both her former lover and herself—and, like many of Los Invasores’ songs, it lingered on the charts and remains a staple on regional Mexican radio. Los Invasores have stayed close to norteño’s traditional sound, mixing corridos and ballads but expanding into a full band with bass and drums; the change dissipates some of the music’s aural melancholy, but the lyrical intensity remains. Over time, they have hosted a rotating cast of artists—for example, lead vocalist Mora left in 1993 but returned in 2013 to helm the now beloved “A Ver Quien Gana”—but the group’s star has shone brighter with each passing year.