1982Released
4:08

Did You Know?

Interesting facts and trivia about Mexican Radio. By Songfacts®.

Like ZZ Top's "Heard It On The X" and The Doors' "The WASP (Texas Radio and The Big Beat)," this song was inspired by the high-wattage, unregulated AM border-blaster Mexican radio stations with signals that traveled well into America, and the occasional interjections in Spanish in the song were recorded off a real Mexican radio station. In a 2010 Songfacts interview with Wall of Voodoo lead singer Stan Ridgway, he explained: "We used to go to rehearsals in my old '67 Mustang. And I used to get on the AM radio there on the console and try to find a Mexican radio station that was wafting in from the border over at Tijuana. This was like 1980, '81 or something. So when I would find one, I would say, 'Oh, hey look you guys, I'm on a Mexican radio.' And so, 'Okay, I'm on one. I'm on a Mexican radio.' And that was the germ of what started to develop, and then it just kind of developed, and a lot of planets were aligning at that point culturally. MTV was getting going and what they called the 'new music' was making some headway into people's ears. Radio still was not playing it, but when MTV became as popular as it did, radio had to play it. And it was right about that time where the door to American culture – or actually straight radio culture – kind of opened up just a little bit, and a few people got their feet in."

The quirky video got a lot of airplay on MTV, which launched in 1981 and didn't have many to choose from at the time. Regarding the video, Ridgway told us: "We went down to Tijuana and did it in about a day and a half on very little money. The record company did not want to spend money on the video or do anything about it at that point. It was kind of a success, it was kind of like a – you know what it was? It was an MTV accidental hit is what it was. And we had to push to get that thing out there ourselves. So in spite of the record company, whatever success it had was really the band's and mine. We were fighting quite a fight just in terms of what suddenly was expected of this electronic, avant-garde underground band. Because that's what we were."

Ridgway wrote this with Wall of Voodoo guitarist Marc Moreland. Ridgway wrote the verse lyrics and came up with the harmonica part.

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Song Analysis

Key, BPM (tempo) and time signature of Mexican Radio.
CKey
MajorMode
4/4Time Signature
165BPM

Album

The album Mexican Radio is released on.

Released By

The record label that has released Mexican Radio.
A&M
© 1982 International Records Syndicate Inc., Manufactured by A&M Records
℗ 1982 International Records Syndicate Inc., Manufactured by A&M Records

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