Sanatçının Albümleri
Serie 32: Yndio
2001 · albüm
Adiós
1999 · albüm
12 Desencadenados Exitos
1997 · albüm
Mis 14 Exitos De Oro
1995 · albüm
Mano A Mano Volumen 2
1982 · albüm
Lorem Ipsum
2023 · single
Blackout
2020 · single
10 Aniversario
2013 · albüm
Serie Cinco Estrellas
2008 · albüm
Mano A Mano Volumen 1
2007 · albüm
Lo Basico
2005 · albüm
Exitos Eternos
2005 · albüm
Edición Limitada
2002 · albüm
Oro Grupero
2002 · albüm
Benzer Sanatçılar
Los Bondadosos
Sanatçı
Los Tukas
Sanatçı
Grupo Tentacion
Sanatçı
Grupo Modelo
Sanatçı
Grupo Yndio
Sanatçı
Ladron
Sanatçı
Los Polifaceticos
Sanatçı
La Tropa Loca
Sanatçı
Grupo Romance
Sanatçı
Los Chicanos
Sanatçı
Viento Y Sol
Sanatçı
Los Rodarte
Sanatçı
Samuray
Sanatçı
Los Muecas
Sanatçı
Los Corazones Solitarios
Sanatçı
Los Freddy's
Sanatçı
Los Humildes
Sanatçı
Grupo Libra
Sanatçı
Los Brios
Sanatçı
Biyografi
Yndio (also known as Grupo Yndio) is a Mexican pop group in the grupero ranchera style. Originating in Sonora in 1972 with former members of Los Pulpos, they established themselves by arranging grupero-styled covers of American soft rock and pop ballads in the norteno manner. Between 1973 (when they hit the top spot on the singles chart with a cover of Los Strwck's "Él" and remained there for four weeks), and 1986, they recorded seven albums for Polygram and scored a number of Top Ten hits in Mexico with covers of Nazareth's "Love Hurts," ELO's "Telephone Line," the Righteous Brothers' version of "Unchained Melody," Paul Young's "Everytime You Go," and Dave Maclean's "We Said Goodbye." In 1985, their album Adios landed in the Top Five of the Mexican Regional albums chart. The band parted ways with Polygram Mexico for Philips Colombia in 1987 and the hits kept coming for the rest of the decade, with the albums Dame un Beso and Dime Adi? going gold. The original sextet were road warriors. They recorded infrequently because they played hundreds of concerts across two continents each year, from Mexico through Central and South America and into the United States. By some estimates, they played over 290 dates annually. Yndio recorded even less during the '90s. While they lost their label deal, they could easily have signed with virtually any independent they chose. Instead, they issued singles -- usually for Prodisc or Joey International -- rather than albums, simply as vehicles to continue touring. In 2007, the band slimmed down to a quintet, but still comprised all the original members. Universal's Fonovisa label owned their catalog and has continued to issue compilation after compilation of hits, B-sides, live albums, and rarities. In 2017, they were featured on a two-disc set entitled Historia Grupera on International Music Treasure that featured ten of the group's hits alongside those of Los Caminantes, Los Bondadosos, and Industria del Amor. ~ Thom Jurek, Rovi