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Adelitas Way
is a hard rock band from Las Vegas, Nevada that broke into mainstream
in 2009 for their song "Invincible", which is the official theme song
for WWE Superstars on WGN America. The song was also Featured in The Raw
vs. Smackdown video game as well as the CSI Miami Finale. Adelitas way
also Performed "I Can Tell" and the current single "Alive" from the
bands second album Home School Valedictorian on ABC's The Bachelor Pad.
On July 14, 2009, its debut self-titled album was released. The band has
toured with Shinedown, Guns N' Roses, Creed, Chevelle, Papa Roach,
Godsmack,Theory of a Deadman, Seether, Three Days Grace, Breaking
Benjamin, Puddle of Mudd, Staind, Alter Bridge, and Halestorm. Adelitas
Way's first single off the second album Home School Valedictorian was
the band's first No. 1 hit at Active Rock Radio. "Sick" was followed up
by "The Collapse" which hit No. 3 at active rock radio. On February 16,
"Criticize" was announced as the 3rd single off Home School
Valedictorian, and reached #1 on the active rock chart, becoming the
bands second #1 single from Home School Valedictorian. "Alive" was
announced as the 4th single from Home School Valedictorian.
"“Invincible,” the edgy, empowering rocker that kicks off the
self-titled debut from Adelitas Way is also an apt description for
singer Rick DeJesus’ undaunted focus and determination. Born and raised
in a rough Philly neighborhood, he saw family members in jail and on
drugs, and a friend shot in the head and killed by drug dealers. Rick’s
future was likewise bleak -- “my friends were carrying guns, selling
drugs, doing drugs, leading reckless lives. I knew I was going to pay
the consequences,” Rick acknowledges. So, in 2005, grasping for any
escape, on a dare Rick auditioned for a VH1 show that would take him to
Los Angeles. With no idea what he was in for, in short succession Rick
appeared on the VH1 show ‘Strip Search,” then ended up in Vegas, living
in his car for three months, doing anything to make ends meet.
“Anything” included the “American Storm” show at the Rivera. Rick calls
his short stint in the revue “a rock moment. I was young, poor and
crazy… and it beat robbing people.” It also allowed him the means to
focus on the anthemic, potent hard modern rock that would become the
calling card of Adelitas Way. Rick’s compelling personal dramas are
channeled into his performances -- and every dynamic note on Adelitas
Way. The heartfelt, radio-ready songs, captured by Grammy-nominated
producer Johnny K (Disturbed, Plain White T’s, 3 Doors Down), Adelitas
Way, range from the sexy romp of ‘Dirty Little Thing” to the emotionally
charged rock anthem of “Last Stand” to the classic mid-tempo rocker
“Scream.”
Rick is joined by kindred spirits in the Las Vegas-based quintet. First
to join Adelitas Way was Iorio, a high school senior who credits his
“rock & roll parents” with getting him a guitar at 7, and turning
him on to KISS, Ted Nugent and Van Halen. His style is a mix of ‘70s
rock with modern flair, and he notes: “I like Slash and Randy
Rhoads—both bluesy and ‘shreddy’ styles.” Trevor Stafford, an in-demand
tour and studio drummer, was on Ozzfest with the band Shuvel at 17, and
is a fan of System of a Down, Primus, and grunge. A Huntington Beach,
California native, he moved to Vegas to be in the band full time. The
final puzzle pieces are New York-bred bassist Derek Johnston and West
Virginia native guitarist Keith Wallen, who joined after the record was
complete. They both bring indie, hardcore and classic rock influences to
the Adelitas Way stew.
Trevor gives major props to Rick for getting Adelitas Way shows with
artists like Chris Cornell, Hinder and Tantric, and generating the huge
industry buzz that ended with the band signing to Virgin. “I played with
a lot of people,” says Trevor, “but never anyone like Rick; his work
ethic is out-of-control amazing.” Rick and Trevor have more than rock in
common. Determined to rise above the chaos of his existence in Philly,
Rick graduated high school with a 3.7 GPA and went to college for three
years, playing college baseball. Likewise, Trevor earned a partial
baseball scholarship, but, like Rick, ultimately chose music. It wasn’t
until Rick was 18 and snuck into a bar for an acoustic night, singing in
front of 60 people for first time ever (and getting a standing
ovation), that he thought, ‘hey, I might not suck!’” Now they’re team
players in Adelitas Way, Rick’s winning personality and dogged work
growing the band’s reputation one fan at a time, literally. “Every
second of my life was focused on music. I bought nothing for the first
year doing music in Vegas. I wore the same shirt every day. I handed a
demo to every person I saw, and that’s how the mystique began. If I was
in Walmart, Dunkin’ Donuts… I probably handed out 6,000 demos. So our
first show we drew 900 kids at the Rainbow Bar.”
Rick and the band (in a different lineup) sold 10,000 self-titled
records under their own steam, “Move On” earning #1 song accolades in
2006 on Vegas rock station KOMP. Regional tours further honed their
reputation as a powerful live act, solidifying Rick as a charismatic
frontman who wrote songs that exorcised and explored the demons of his
past. Their songs, like “Scream,” written in a scummy Memphis motel
room, are a whole-band effort. Rick’s lyrics are at once introspective,
compassionate, unflinching and inspiring. On “Invincible,” a band
favorite, Rick explains, “I was going for that ‘Incredible Hulk’
feeling; a song that pumps you up, a crowd-pleaser. It’s about our
attitude: I’m not going to let anyone stand in the way of my dreams.”
One of the band’s most-asked questions is their name. Rick, the
consummate storyteller on and offstage, relates a great true tale.
During a band road trip to LA, they took a detour to San Diego, and when
Rick woke up from a nap in the back of the band truck, they were
getting arrested in Mexico. Corrupt cops robbed the band, but Rick
secreted away a little cash in his socks. Freaked out, the band went to
the first bar they saw in Tijuana to have a beer and calm their nerves.
It was the Adelita Bar. “There were a bunch of young, really pretty
girls and I realized it was basically a brothel,” explains Rick. “I
chatted with one girl, questioning why she was living this life? And I
wrote a song about it. The band name emerged from the sad stories behind
the ‘Way’ they lived at the Adelita—Adelitas Way. As a songwriter,”
Rick continues, “I’m very emotional, I put myself in people’s shoes a
lot and live vicariously. My songs are about true situations.” That’s
reflected in their well rounded and timeless album. For instance, “All
Fall Down” is about Rick’s headspace before he left the mean streets of
Philly. “Before I moved, everything was gloomy and depressing. But as a
kid, your only concern was what you were going to be for Halloween, or
get for Christmas. So the song is about how you should have savored
those moments. I took things for granted.”
In 2009, with the rising success of Adelitas Way, Rick takes nothing for
granted, and some days, feels lucky just to be alive. As teenage
guitarist Chris observes, “we made it this far by hard work and
nickel-and-dimeing it, vans breaking down in the middle of the desert,
the whole bit. It took a while to find this ideal lineup, where we all
want the same thing. And everything finally feels right.”
Wikipedia & adelitaswaymusic.net
Official Homepage: www.adelitaswaymusic.net
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