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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Entertainment
Carolina A. Miranda

Los Angeles Times Carolina A. Miranda column

June 18--Ask most Angelenos which band currently holds the record -- along with Taylor Swift -- for most sold-out shows at the Staples Center, and chances are they will name a legacy rock act like the Rolling Stones or U2.

They would be wrong.

The record-holder is Manᬠthe pop-rock outfit from Mexico, which has performed a total of 11 sold-out shows at the 18,000-seat venue over its career. This week, the band is back at Staples for two nearly sold-out shows that could put them ahead of Swift, at least until August when the pop star returns to L.A.

But Manᠩs currently enjoying a moment.

The band's ninth studio album, "Cama Incendiada" ("Burning Bed") has occupied the top slots of the Billboard Latin Pop charts since its debut in early May and has been No. 1 for the last four weeks. The album's first single, "Mi Verdad" (My Truth), a duet with Colombian songstress Shakira, debuted at the top of Billboard's Hot Latin Songs chart at the end of February, and it has remained among the top 10 Latin Pop Songs for 17 weeks.

"We wanted to do something new: works with new sounds, new elements," Gonzᬥz says via telephone from the Mojave Desert, where the band filmed the music video for "La Prisi󮢠(The Prison). "There are funk elements. There are danceable elements. There is a lot of Latin rhythm. It's got a bit more movement.

"It's a very different record from what we did in the past, but it's still Manᮢ

The band certainly has a distinct sound, marked less by its music -- a blend of pop-rock infused with Caribbean grooves -- than by Fher's rough-hewn vocals, which lend themselves equally as well to romantic ballads as they do to rock anthems. But over the course of its last few albums, that sound had become routine and the lyrics had grown increasingly angsty, leading to grumbles about the band losing its touch.

Some Mexican critics have even derided Manᠡs fresa (literally "strawberry" but slang for "rich and stuck-up"). "Cama Incendiada," however, has received positive write-ups. Leila Cobo of Billboard described it as "an album full of party rock with a surprising edge."

Part of that edge comes from the band's political stances. They've never shied away from speaking out on difficult topics. In the late 1990s, it called for Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet to be tried. The group's 1997 song "Me Voy a Convertir en un Ave" (I Will Become a Bird) is inspired by a work by Uruguayan author Mario Benedetti about a political prisoner.

In recent years, various members of the band have spoken in favor of immigration reform in the United States and against corruption in Mexico.

"Mexican politicians are an embarrassment," says Fher (who goes by his first name) by telephone from Guadalajara. "Our political class has become completely dehumanized. When the 43 students from Ayotzinapa disappeared, the politicians barely reacted -- as if these 43 people didn't have value. There's a lack of empathy, and it's really [messed] up. It scares me."

In the new album, they recorded a rock-guitar-meets-Mexican-polka cover of "Somos M᳠Americanos" (We Are More American), a song by the San Jose-based norte񯠢and Los Tigres del Norte, that serves as an anthem to immigrants in the United States. (Sample lyric: "They keep shouting at me to return to my land / Because I don't fit here / But I want to remind the gringo that I didn't cross the border / the border crossed me.")

"Manᠦor many years has been asking for immigration reform," says Gonzᬥz. "We have long valued the role of immigrants in the U.S., who work so hard to seek a better life for themselves. The United States is a place that was formed by immigrants."

"When we heard the Los Tigres song," he adds, "we thought that it perfectly captured the Mexican experience. If there is a group that has narrated the story of the Mexican immigrant in the U.S., it's Los Tigres del Norte. They are idols."

Manᠡlso looked outside the band for help putting the new album together.

"With a lot of humility, we said, 'Ӳale, you are now in charge,'" says Fher of the process. "We had good chemistry with him. We let ourselves be loved. And he gave it another color. It refreshed the sound."

It also helped Manᠨold on to its status as one of the biggest Latin rock acts of all time.

The band began life in the early 1980s in the musicians' native Guadalajara as a group called Sombrero Verde (Green Hat), inspired by the music of the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. By the mid-1980s, the group had lost steam and various members departed, either to pursue other opportunities or go back to school.

Now Manᠩs ready for new challenges. The band kicked off its U.S. tour in San Diego last week and arrives at the Staples Center for shows on Thursday and Saturday. As always, it will be a spectacle, promises Fher: "We have a production designer from Belgium and the show looks beautiful -- with incredible video and impeccable sound."

And naturally, there will be at least one extravagant drum solo. Gonzᬥz is known for his elaborate setups, complete with rotating platforms and other tricks. During the last tour, for "Drama y luz," he popped open a drum head and pulled out a beer.

But he won't say what he has in store for the Los Angeles shows.

"Let's just say there will be a lot of surprises," he chuckles cryptically. "We are building the circus, as I like to say."

carolina.miranda@latimes.com

------

Man

Where: Staples Center, 1111 S. Figueroa St., Los Angeles

When: 8:30 p.m. Thursday and Saturday

Tickets: $75-$360

Info: staplescenter.com

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