Wall Of Voodoo – Mexican Radio

Wall Of Voodoo – Mexican Radio

‘Mexican Radio’ is a song by American rock band Wall of Voodoo. The track was initially released on their second studio album Call of the West (1982). The video for the single was regularly featured on MTV in the United States, contributing to the song's popularity. The song peaked in the US at No. 58 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. It also reached No. 18 in Canada, No. 21 in New Zealand, No.33 in Australia and No. 64 in the UK. The song gained cult status and was often played on radio stations featuring punk and new wave music. Being the only single by Wall of Voodoo to reach the top 100 in the US, ‘Mexican Radio’ is considered a one-hit wonder.

The song's lyrics describe listening to the broadcasts of high-wattage unregulated Mexican radio stations, known as border blasters, whose AM broadcasts are strong enough to be picked up by radio receivers in the US. The song was inspired by car trips taken by Wall of Voodoo frontman Stan Ridgway and guitarist Marc Moreland on their way to rehearsals, when they would listen to Mexican broadcasts, preferring their programming to mainstream Los Angeles radio. During one of the band's sessions, Moreland played them a demo tape that he had recorded of himself repeatedly singing the line "I'm on a Mexican radio" over a guitar riff and that sound clip became the starting point of the single.

Wall of Voodoo

In order to emulate the sounds of AM radio, many of the song's instruments, including the synthesizers, were played through amplifiers, rather than being recorded directly through the microphones to the mixing console. They recorded some of Moreland's guitar through an amplifier placed in the restroom at the back of the studio and Ridgway sang some of the vocals through a handmade bullhorn. The song also includes soundbites recorded by Ridgway during a trip to Mexico, including the broadcast of a dog race that was playing over a radio in a bar that he visited.

The video for ‘Mexican Radio’ was featured regularly on MTV in the weeks following its release. It was the first music video created by filmmaker and former the Bruthers frontman Frank Delia, who had been a long-time friend of Wall of Voodoo band members. The video impressed the Ramones, who hired Delia to direct videos for them as a result. The video also includes bizarre imagery, including a shot of Ridgway's face surfacing from a bowl of beans. Some of the footage was shot in Tijuana, Mexico at the bullfights. Also, actor Carel Struycken makes a brief appearance playing the video's director. The video cost $15,000 to make and was originally shot on film.

Ridgway, who left Wall of Voodoo in 1983 to embark on a solo career, told Mix magazine in 2005: "The 'one-hit wonder' status of 'Mexican Radio' is not something to be ashamed of. Obviously, it's not all the band was about, and it's possible the light from it blinded some people from hearing other things the band did, but it exposed a lot of people to our music who probably wouldn't have heard it — and maybe because of it, after Wall of Voodoo I was lucky enough to continue to write songs and make music. If there wasn't a 'Mexican Radio,' you probably wouldn't be talking to me now."

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Label – I.R.S.
Songwriters – Wall of Voodoo
Producer – Richard Mazda

SONG LYRICS

[Verse 1]
I feel a hot wind on my shoulder
And the touch of a world that is older
I turn the switch and check the number
I leave it on when in bed I slumber
I hear the rhythms of the music
I buy the product and never use it
I hear the talking of the DJ
Can't understand, just what does he say?
 
[Chorus]
I'm on a Mexican radio
I'm on a Mexican woah-oh radio
 
[Verse 2]
I dial it in and tune the station
They talk about the U.S. inflation
I understand just a little
No comprende, it's a riddle
 
[Chorus]
I'm on a Mexican radio
I'm on a Mexican woah-oh radio
I'm on a Mexican radio
I'm on a Mexican woah-oh radio
 
[Verse 3]
I wish I was in Tijuana
Eating barbecued iguana
I took requests on the telephone
I'm on a wavelength far from home
I feel a hot wind on my shoulder
I dial it in from south of the border
I hear the talking of the DJ
Can't understand, just what does he say?
 
[Chorus]
I'm on a Mexican radio
I'm on a Mexican woah-oh radio
I'm on a Mexican radio
I'm on a Mexican woah-oh radio
 
[Bridge]
Radio, radio
Radio, radio
Radio, radio
Radio, radio
 
[Chorus]
I'm on a Mexican radio
I'm on a Mexican woah-oh radio
I'm on a Mexican radio
I'm on a Mexican woah-oh radio
[Outro]
Radio, radio
(What does he say?) Radio, radio
Radio, radio
Radio, radio
Radio, radio
Radio, radio
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