A
New York-based, Dominican boy band with their roots deep in bachata?
If that sounds unlikely, well, Aventura have managed to cope with
it. Formed in 1994 in the Bronx by a group of four boys (Anthony
Santos, Lenny Santos, Max Santos, and Henry Santos Jeter) who were
determined to break Dominican bachata music out from its traditional
base and fuse it with the other sounds they heard every day, like
hip-hop and R&B. Interestingly, unlike other youths seeking
success, they didn't give themselves over to a producer who might
mold their sound; instead, they proceeded to learn all the skills
they needed themselves, from production to instruments.
Their
real break came in 1999. Signed to BMG, they released their debut
-- with an outside producer. The material, however, was their own,
and they resisted the attempt to turn them into a cookie-cutter
boy band in the Backstreet Boys, *N'Sync style by ensuring the bachata
element remained dominant. However, it fell between the cracks of
both the burgeoning Latin movement, and the pop/R&B chart-toppers.
Three years would pass before they released We Broke the Rules,
in which time they worked hard to refine what they were doing, and
find a true direction. Whatever they did, it appeared to work, as
the single "Obsesion" became a hit with Latin youth, finding
a strong crossover into hip-hop. However, as the album's title promised,
they did break all the bachata rules, bringing the style very much
into the new Millennium without sacrificing the style's roots. While
catching a growing U.S. audience, they also became popular in Europe,
thanks to frequent touring and a different sound. In 2003, they
returned with Love & Hate, which saw them progressing even further
with their sound, adding merengue into the mix, and upping the R&B/hip-hop
quotient without losing touch with their background, singing in
Spanish, English, and Spanglish.
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