He was 66 years old, according to local media.
With an interest in genres ranging from ska to hip-hop, Pina
collaborated with a number of major Mexican rock artists
including Cafe Tacvba, Lila Downs and Julieta Venegas. In 2002
his solo album "Barrio Bravo" was nominated for a Latin Grammy.
The composer and singer began playing music with his brothers
growing up in Monterrey near the northern border, according to
his official website. He picked up the accordion in his late
20s, and, still in Monterrey, learned Colombia's celebrated
vallenato style, central to the bouncy cumbia genre.
"Nobody can resist cumbia," Pina wrote in his last tweet before
his death, ahead of concerts planned in the United States, one
of some 30 countries he had toured, according to his profile on
the Spotify music streaming platform.
"The rebel of the accordion has left us. His music united Latin
American cultures and captivated Americans," the U.S. Embassy in
Mexico wrote on Twitter.
(Reporting by Daina Beth Solomon and Miguel Angel Gutierrez;
Editing by Leslie Adler)
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