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Sunday, January 24,
The F
Eagle photos by Stuart Villarn
From left, Roy Rodriguez, Ray Portales, George Ortega and Justice of the Peace Tommy Munoz were bandmates in the local band Bobby and the Hurricanes. A special exhibit on Hisp:
heritage at the College Station Conference Center includes memorabilia from the group.
Golden oldies
Hispanic heritage exhibit features memorabilia from local band
By JAY BRAKEFIELD
Special to The Eagle
The eight dark-haired young men
look out from the photo with all the
confidence and uncertainty of
youth. The black-and-white image,
on display in a Hispanic heritage
exhibit at the College Station Con-
ference Center, captures these men
when they performed as Bobby and
the Hurricanes, touring the state
and opening for major acts.
They never expected to become
stars, but they earned good money,
made some records and had good
times and misadventures that they
recall fondly.
The man holding the drum sticks
in the photo, Tommy Munoz, is a
justice of the peace now. Several
former Hurricanes are retired. One
was recently hit by a tragedy that
stunned his old friends.
Talent show
The band started in the early
1960s at Anson Jones Junior High,
where Munoz, Roy Rodriguez and
Ray Portales were in the school
band. They jammed at the home of
a friend, George Ortega.
Those four, plus Robert Mendez,
worked up three songs for a school
talent show. When the emcee asked
how he should introduce them,
they came up with the band name
on the spot. Bobby was Mendez,
who played guitar and sang lead.
They're not sure where the
Hurricanes part came from, but it
may have been a nod to a popular
group of the day, Johnny and the
Hurricanes.
Memories differ.on how they did
in the contest. Some of the guys say
they won; Mendez is sure they
came in second to a trumpet. player.
► If YGY
• What: "Siempre! Otra Vez,
Hispanic Culture in Brazos
County" exhibit.
• Where: College Station
Conference Center, 1300 George
Bush Drive.
• When: Through the spring.
• More information: 764-3491.
After all this time, it hardly mat-
ters. But they all remember clearly
that, as a result of the contest, they
appeared on a local midday TV
show, Town Talk, on KBTX. They
performed the same three songs
they had played in the contest. A lot
of kids skipped school that day.
Moving up
Rodriguez and Portales played
tenor saxophones. Ortega played
guitar, though he later switched to
organ. Munoz, for that matter, had
switched from sax because the
group needed a drummer.
After deciding to keep the band
going, the Hurricanes added songs
and members. Greg Rodriguez, no
relation to Roy Rodriguez, joined as
See BAND, Page D7
Bobby and the Hurricanes started as a talent-show act at Anson Jones Junior High in the
1960s and went on to record albums and tour the state performing concerts.
Sunday, January 24, 2010 The Eagle . theeagle.com D7
Brazos Life
BAND: Group members enjoyed community support and grew into leaders
Continued from D1
a singer, emcee and booking
agent. Agapito "Pete" Valadez
played guitar. And Phillip
Cornejo helped set the rhythm
on bass.
Soon they were working
regularly on weekends, play-
ing dances, parties, weddings
and quinceaneras. As their
popularity grew, they traveled
to Houston, San Antonio,
Dallas, Fort Worth, Lubbock
and smaller towns. They
played big ballrooms, opening
for such popular acts as Little
Joe and the Latinaires,
Alfonso Ramos and Sunny
and the Sunliners.
They lugged the organ up
stairs and coped with the sand
that got in it in Lubbock. In
far West Texas, they played at
a converted bowling alley and
a place that doubled as a
wrestling arena. The ring was
their stage at that gig, in
Morton. "People danced all
the way around it like
Indians," Ortega recalled. "It
was really weird, you know?"
"There was nothing there"
in the town, Munoz said.
"Even the radio station looked
like an outhouse." But crowds
from the surrounding area
packed the place.
Good of days
The Hurricanes covered
popular tunes such as the
Sunliners' Golly Gee and Talk
to Me, Beatles songs, numbers
by regional artists such as the
Jokers and Gene Thomas, and
even some soul material,
including James Brown's
Papa's Got a Brand New Bag.
They sang in both English and
Spanish and sometimes put a
Hispanic spin on a standard
tune; one of their recordings .
is called El Jerk.
They were making good
money, often getting a guaran-
tee and a share of ticket sales,
called "the door.
Roy Rodriguez's dad went
along on the road to take the
tickets and make sure they
got their share. Memories
vary on how much those gigs
took in; Greg Rodriguez says
they' made as much as $3,000
or $4,000 a night. Mendez
recalls getting $2,500 from a
club owner who had refused
to guarantee them $1,000. ,
They bought a 1957 Plymouth
station wagon with a push-
button transmission and a
trailer, which they describe as
looking like a barbecue pit, to
haul their equipment.
"We made damn good
The young men
of Bobby and
the Hurricanes
were filling ven-
ues on the road
- enough to
make a couple
thousand dollars
a night at their
peak.
Eagle photo by
Stuart Villanueva
money," recalled Greg
Rodriguez, 66. "That money
helped me go to college."
Community support
At a rough upstairs club in
Dallas, gunfire broke out
while they played. Returning
from West Texas on a Sunday,
with a wedding gig scheduled
for that night, Portales fell
asleep at the wheel outside
Abilene and veered down an
incline. No one was hurt, but
the trailer pulled loose and
the instruments were dam-
aged. A couple of the guys
hitchhiked into town and
called family members, who
came to ferry them home.
The families, in fact, were
very supportive, as was the
larger Hispanic community.
Munoz recalls that his dad,
Ascencion Munoz, sat down
one day and started playing
his son's drums. Turned out
he had once played with a.
local band called the Bolero
Kings. "I didn't know he could
do that," Munoz said.
"The only problem we had
was trying to find a place to
practice because we made too
much noise," Portales said.
The local LULAC chapter
solved that by allowing the
boys to use its facilities.
Folks they met on the road
were supportive, too. "People
were just unbelievable," said
Portales, 63. "They would pre-
pare food and invite us into
their homes. They'd say, `Y'all
don't have to stay in a motel;
you can stay here."'
Most of the band's record-
ings were cover versions of
others' songs, but one,
Georgie's Special, was an orig-
inal. One of these days, they'll
get those little 45-rpm discs
transferred to a digital mode.
There's also some music on
reel-to-reel tapes and homes
movies of the band, without
sound. Some posters and jack-
ets also survive, along with
the memories.
Catching up
After a year or 18 months
with the band, Valadez got
married and left; he was
replaced by Gilbert Ramirez.
Trumpet player Henry "June-
bug" Gongora also joined the
group. Around 1967, as other
members married or entered
military service, the Hurri-
canes broke up. Portales,
Mendez, Valadez and Ortega
played in other local bands.
Roy Rodriguez played with
Little Joe. Only Mendez
became a full-time profession-
al musician, but he tired of
that after a couple of years
and continued playing locally
until a few years ago While
holding down a regular job.
He's still working as a driver
for UPS Inc.
These days, Roy Rodriguez
likes to pull out his horn
around Christmas and play
carols. Portales would like to
play more, but his sax needs
work, and he's trying to
decide whether to get it fixed
or buy a secondhand instru-
ment. Valadez, 71, who retired
from driving a concrete truck
in 2005, said, "I haven't
touched a guitar for a while
now; I'm rusty."
The Hurricanes used to play
reunion gigs now and again,
but they haven't gotten togeth-
er in a few years. "Maybe
we'll do it again," said
Portales, who's retired from
H-E-B grocery stores and
involved in running Garcia's,
a family restaurant in Bedias,
where he lives.
Roy Rodriguez, 62, estab-
lished his own business,
Rodriguez Wheel Alignment &
Auto Repair, sold it to his son
and daughter-in-law a few
years ago and continues to
work there, free of the pres-
sure of being the boss. Greg
Rodriguez became a pioneer
in Hispanic radio and still
does a show six days a week
on KTAM, 1240 AM, in Bryan.
He also served on the Bryan
City Council for several years'
and continued his musical
interests as a church choir
director for 12 years. Munoz,
62, is the justice of the peace
for Precinct 2, Place 2.
Ortega, 63, retired from
working with computers and
other electronic equipment at
A&M and now cares for his
aged mother, who lives next
door. "It's a job, but it doesn't
pay anything," he says, but
it's not a complaint.
Phillip Cornejo, 63, moved
to the Austin area, where he
established a printing busi-
ness, his old friends say. A
few days before Christmas,
while Cornejo and his wife
were away, their son John
Phillip Cornejo, 24, was shot
to death at the home he
shared with his parents and
his brother Phillip, 45. The
detaiN are unclear. The older
brother has been charged
with murder and remains in
the Williamson County Jail in
lieu of $500,000 bail.
Several of the band mem-
bers have remained in touch
with their former band mate,
who returns to the area often
to visit family. "I know what
he's going through. I lost my
youngest son back in 2003,"
Mendez said.
Whatever the years have
brought, though, the former
Hurricanes share memories of
being a tight group of young
men who hung out together
even when they weren't play-
ing music.
"We don't see each other
anymore. We're good friends.
We're grandpas now," said
Greg Rodriguez. "We had
some good old times. Those
days will never come again."