Luis Jiménez Readies for a Doubleheader at the Latin Grammys with LAGOS & Mesoneros: ‘It’s Double the Joy’

The two bands of the Venezuelan singer compete this year in the best pop/rock song category.

Luis Jiménez Readies for a Doubleheader at the Latin Grammys with LAGOS & Mesoneros: ‘It’s Double the Joy’

When Luis Jiménez arrives at the 2024 Latin Grammy Awards ceremony on Thursday (Nov. 14), he will have to play a doubleheader: He will walk the red carpet twice, speak to the same media outlets twice, and perhaps have to split up for the celebrations. The reason? The Venezuelan singer and musician’s two bands, LAGOS and Los Mesoneros, are both nominated this year — and in the same category!

Both are up for best pop/rock song: LAGOS for “Blanco y Negro” with Elena Rose, and Los Mesoneros for “Diciembre.”

LAGOS is also nominated for best pop song for “Dime Quién.” The pop duo, formed in 2019 by Jiménez and Agustín Zubillaga, already won best pop/rock song last year with Lasso’s “Ojos Marrones,” which they co-wrote. But this time they compete as performers for two songs from their sophomore album Alta Fidelidad, released in May under Warner Music México.

As for Los Mesoneros, the rock band, active since 2006, had already received a handful of nominations in the past, including for best new artist (2012), best rock album (in 2012 for Indeleble, 2020 for Pangea, and 2021 for Los Mesoneros Live Desde Pangea), as well as best pop/rock song (in 2020 for “Últimas Palabras”). Now they compete with a song from their album Nuestro Año, released in April independently.

“It’s the first time that the bands’ times were synchronized,” Jiménez tells Billboard Español. “When Pangea, Mesoneros’ third album, and Clásico, LAGOS’s debut album, came out, it’s not that it wasn’t challenging — but compared to the size of the projects today, it was too easy.”

He adds: “Now, without a doubt, the challenge is to find the time and the mental state to be able to work creatively and also be able to have those editorial lines separated. It is becoming more and more complicated. But I like a challenge.”

In its 25th anniversary, the Latin Grammys will be broadcast live from the Kaseya Center in Miami on Univision, Galavisión and ViX starting at 8 p.m. (Eastern Time). A few days later, on Nov. 21, Jiménez will perform with Los Mesoneros for the first time at the iconic National Auditorium in Mexico City, where he lives.

Luis, how did you feel when you found out that you were nominated with your two bands in the same category?

A very strange, very particular sensation. Obviously, first and foremost it’s double the joy — “Oh, how crazy, they nominated us!” Then, this was a possible scenario and I didn’t really think much about what I would do if it happened; it was simply: “Well, let’s send all these songs, these albums, and whatever has to happen happens.” Receiving that news was really very nice, it is certainly special for me because for the first time they nominated Los Mesoneros and LAGOS simultaneously, and having that honor of being with all of them in that category is something wonderful.

The two albums came out only a month apart. How has this year been for you?

It’s been a titanic challenge. It really is difficult. I understand why no one does it, because it is very complicated to manage the time, and also to do things with excellence like this, in this format. But I think I’m very lucky and fortunate to have colleagues in each of the projects who support me in everything and who are incredible partners and who have also known how to handle this and help me make everything work out and turn out well, and do it with the standard that we have, and help me survive in the attempt.

Did you record with both bands in parallel? What was this process like?

Actually, thank God it wasn’t parallel, because that would have been very rough. Yes, there was a lot at times in the composition process, like sometimes I was writing with LAGOS and suddenly I went into a lock-out with Mesoneros, but it wasn’t so much that I was one day here and one day there, but rather taking a couple of weeks or a month with LAGOS, and then doing the same with Mesoneros. But the recording was appart. LAGOS recorded Alta Fidelidad about seven months before the Mesoneros album, or at least the second half. Although there were singles there that were sneaking in.

Any particular anecdotes trying to balance things with both groups?

Man, all the time, all the multitasking is crazy. I remember, for example, two or three years ago at the Latin Grammys, I also had to be there both with Mesoneros and LAGOS. LAGOS was there because we were going to play at a Warner party, and Mesoneros was nominated, and I had to go around all over Las Vegas even repeating some interviews — “Ah, is you again!?” And I was like, “Yes, but no.” And well, what’s going to happen now in Miami is going to be quite funny too, because even in the dressing room it’s a challenge. It’s a game of trying to be in two places at the same time. It’s challenging, it’s fun, and well, we’re now talking about that — doing the red carpet twice. It is quite particular.

You started doing rock with Los Mesoneros and then pop with LAGOS. Which genre do you identify with most today?

It’s very difficult to answer that — because it’s as if they’d ask you, “Who do you love more, your mom or your dad?” or “Which child do you love more?” Each one has its own thing and they fulfill me in different ways. Obviously I have always had a rock soul, but even since I was little I have also always been a pop lover. People who know me starting with Los Mesoneros never knew that I had that pop side, but it has always been there, actually. And now with LAGOS, I managed to [get to] that output and place where I can also show that side — but both satisfy me and make me happy in different ways.

As a performer, when you started with LAGOS, how difficult was it to find your own pop sound after years doing rock with Los Mesoneros?

It’s always a challenge and I think that’s the challenge, finding yourself within those scenarios. But I think that LAGOS is very interesting because when it came to light, in 2019, Agustín and I had actually been writing songs for other artists for a while, and making more pop music. And I enjoyed it a lot, it’s just that people didn’t picture it. For me, it was also an adventure to get involved in something that had nothing to do with what I had been doing, but also to discover other facets of myself.

Then, when we launched our LAGOS project, it was time to [ask ourselves], “What is our voice, what is our sound, how do we do it?” And that entailed some research, and a bit of trial and error — but luckily Agustín and I already had that very advanced work chemistry. And in some very crazy way — from Agustín with his set of influences, and me with my more alternative, more rock side — on paper it didn’t have to work, but it worked amazingly. I think that’s what gave LAGOS its identity.

What do your colleagues from both bands say? You’ve said they support you, but now with the nominations, is there any rivalry? Pride? Both?

I truly believe it’s been a miracle. I think that many project colleagues perhaps wouldn’t be able to tolerate such a dynamic — because it’s one thing to do it perhaps alternatingly, but doing it in parallel is a level further. That simultaneity has been the interesting thing, and I think I am seriously too lucky — because they have truly been a great source of support for me. I think they also see the level of dedication and effort and sacrifice that I make to give my 100% to both projects, and in reality they have been allies and are a crucial part of making it work. They are even accomplices.

Now that you have experienced this in parallel this year, is it feasible for you to maintain both bands in the future?

I think we have had to change a lot over time. Like, I have also had to learn to give up many things. I am so neurotic producing, writing, arranging, editing… I have also learned to adapt to growth, and increasingly see where I add more value [by giving] up roles. Yes, I want to continue doing this in parallel. Perhaps obviously now, after this year that has been so intense, we must adapt to delegating more… I think that now the challenge is going to be to get a schedule that’s a little less synchronized, but I do see it as a project that can continue and last longer.

If you win, who do you want to go on stage with to receive the award?

Look, I can leave happy with a scenario in which LAGOS wins in the category that is alone, and Mesoneros wins in the one that includes both. I think everyone ends up happy there. But in reality, whatever has to happen happens. I feel that with so many albums and so much music that comes out every week these days, it’s crazy to be on a list so short, that the Academy considers it one of the five best songs of the genre — and that those five include both bands — for me it’s quite an incredible achievement.