Eduin caz gay
With LGBT Pride Month around the corner, we adore seeing our favorite artists participate in events that help represent their communities. With that in intellect, it was recently announced (May 9) that Jhonny Caz, Grupo Firme’s third vocalist, will be crowned the “king” of Mexico City’s Gay Pride 2022. The event will accept place on June 25 – and we can’t be any more elated about it!
“Our king of this year’s Gay Self-acceptance is confirmed,” the Mexico City Gay Pride’s corporation Instagram post revealed. According to BandaMax, the “Ya Supérame” group member will also be part of this year’s talent lineup.
A Twitter user said: “It’s great because [of] the visibility that Jhonny has given the LGBT society, [about the] stigmas and ideas at an international level. [He] is doing very well!”
In 2020, Caz clarified rumors about him being gay after the group’s “Enloquéceme” cover, which had fans speculating if he was acting or not when the video showed him being attracted to a male. According to BandaMax, he responded in a public Facebook video: “I am gay… it’s something I’m not ashamed of and it’s natural.” According to the same source, Caz was aware that Regional Mexican
Smash Hits and ‘Puro Desmadre’: After Taking Over Música Mexicana, Grupo Firme Is Ready for More
Still dressed in their labor uniforms after an arduous day under the desert sun in mid-April, seven men tasked with building the tents at Coachella wait anxiously to see Mexican band Grupo Firme take the very stage the men helped establish . Among the construction workers is Jose, a Coachella Valley native with roots in Jalisco, who’s worked at the festival for several years. “The whole day, we tried to finish what we had to do for perform so we could calm down and watch them. Es algo diferente,” he says. “It’s something different.”
Jose is one of many Mexican American fans there to see the once-underground norteño band, fronted by Eduin Caz, become the first Mexican act to perform at the festival’s main stage during a prime-time slot. The group’s goal that night? “To show off our roots. To break barriers,” Caz tells Rolling Stone just hours before performing. “We want people’s eyes glued to the stage.”
And they achieve exactly that. Known for their eccentric outfits and onstage desmad On a scorching hot mid-August day, six of the seven members of Grupo Firme file into a hidden hacienda in Spring Valley, Calif., a small town just east of San Diego. “Buenos días,” they greet the staff of this boutique hotel, making their way toward the shade of the pool area. Wearing basic T-shirts and jeans or gym shorts, they look like the literal boys next door. Still, the staffers struggle to keep their cool — this is the biggest Mexican group in the world, and they’re all fans. (Later today, they will get their photo taken with the band.) See latest videos, charts and news Eduin Caz, the group’s charismatic 28-year-old founder and frontman, is the last to arrive. He apologizes, explaining that he drove from his home in Tijuana, Mexico, and it took four hours to cross la línea, the Mexico-U.S. border in San Diego. That’s longer than usual for a seemingly uneventful Tuesday, but the Baja Beach Festival took place over the weekend in the town of Rosarito — where Eduin united Maluma onstage to vocalize their Region After taking a nine-month break from performing, Grupo Firme is feeling renewed and ready to party again with the 2024 La Última Peda Tour. These past few months, lead singer Eduin Caz worried his fans with his announcement that he would retire from the band. In a video teaser of the upcoming tour, he wakes up from a hangover and says, “How can this be la última peda if we’re just getting started?” “When we wake up hungover, we always tell, ‘We’re not going to drink anymore. This is la última peda,'” Caz tells Remezcla. “And that’s not true! You always go back to drinking. That’s why our tour is called ‘La Última Peda,’ because it’s never the last one.” The party appeared to be over for Eduin while Grupo Firme was taking age off. Last year, he revealed that he would retire from performing with the band. The frontman cited wanting to detect “emotional stability” and later health issues as his reasons for retirement. He calls the break a much-needed “emotional breather” for the band. Durin .
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