Clave Especial talks MrBeast, summer EP ‘Afterafter’

Clave Especial talks MrBeast, summer EP ‘Afterafter’


Clave Especial is finally taking a break.

In the last two months, the corrido tumbado band from Salinas, Calif., performed at the South by Southwest music festival in Texasโ€”and made headlines by singing a narcocorrido; spoke to Latino students at Cornell University in upstate New York; and even embarked on a impromptu 10-hour road trip to show their support for Juan, a contestant from Mexico on one of MrBeastโ€™s latest challenges who has become a viral sensation.

In fact, the trioโ€” lead singer Alejandro Ahumada, guitarist Leonardo Lomeli and tololoche player Rogelio Gonzalez โ€” felt so compelled to make the pilgrimage to the North Carolina grocery store where Juan has been sequestered for months, that they ditched all press events for their latest EP โ€œAfterafter,โ€ released on April 30, in order to meet and serenade him. The band even awarded a $5,000 scholarship to his son, Angel.

โ€œWhy? Because it felt so right,โ€ said Ahumada. โ€œHis story connected with us, because we also come from hardworking parents that really gave it all for us.โ€

As the rush of East Coast travel wore off, Clave Especial returned to Salinas to throw a huge homecoming bash. โ€œItโ€™s like a full-circle moment,โ€ said Ahumada of their May 4 performance at the Salinas Sports Complex.

They joined a video call from their childhood bedrooms to discuss โ€œAfterafter,โ€ a five-track project set to a fiery tempo โ€” 140 BPM to be exact โ€” that is nostalgic for summer days and the never-ending after-parties they bring. The songs were selected from their vault, they said, which includes a long list of tracks that didnโ€™t make the cut for โ€œMija No Te Asustes,โ€ the bandโ€™s 2025 critically acclaimed debut that featured co-signs by Fuerza Regida, Edgardo Nuรฑez and Luis R Conquirez.

This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.

What was it like to perform back home in Salinas?

Alex: Thatโ€™s actually the second time that we come back as Clave Especial. The first show was at the Fox Theater, which was a sold-out show. People were asking us, โ€œHey when are you guys coming back?โ€ We decided to do it now at the Salinas Sports Complex.

Jumping to the EP, how did โ€œAfterafterโ€ come to be?

Alex: It was more like a fun concept that we kind of had in mind. We were actually working towards an album at a writers camp in Ensenada. It was at the beach. Then we jumped around to Miami, Puerto Vallarta. We caught ourselves jumping around beaches, a lot of parties. We want to give people like a summer EP, something they can slap during the summer when theyโ€™re partying.

If โ€œMija No Te Asustesโ€ is an album about this confident boss man calling the shots, how would you characterize โ€œAfterafterโ€?

Alex: I think itโ€™s that same guy from the first album, heโ€™s still living it up. In โ€œMija No Te Asustesโ€ thereโ€™s some songs like โ€œComo Capoโ€ that introduce that vibe to this EP, so we just continued that wave. It was our biggest song yet. We knew that people liked us apart from the corridos like โ€œRรกpido Soy,โ€ โ€œNo Son Doritos,โ€ but I think with โ€œComo Capoโ€ we discovered that people like other sounds and lyrics. Thatโ€™s what we tried to continue in โ€œAfterafter.โ€

Musically, how would you describe the sound of this EP?

Leo: One thing about us, when we get in the studio, we play a lot in the tempo 6/8s, this upbeat speed. We always hit the BPM at 140 BPM โ€” thatโ€™s the Clave Especial essence.

One of the songs that caught my interest was โ€œScary Movie,โ€ because it reminded me of a corrido-inspired โ€œThrillerโ€ (by Michael Jackson). It also connects the past album because thereโ€™s a phrase where you say โ€œMija, no te asustes.โ€ Tell me the backstory of that spooky song.

Alex: Thatโ€™s funny, because Iโ€™m going to watch the Michael Jackson movie today. That song was actually composed by someone from Street Mob from Ensenada. I think that song was already in the vault.

Leo: That song was tailored for [the past] album. The [ad lib] was an Easter egg.

I saw that you were all recently in North Carolina at the grocery store where Mr. Beast is doing a challenge. Thereโ€™s one Mexican dad named Juan competing for the million-dollar prize. You guys went to see him and also gave his son a scholarship. Why was it important for you guys to show up?

Alex: Basically we were in [New York] having dinner. We had some press the next day but we had to cancel on them. We commented on Mr. Beastโ€™s video, and the comment got a lot of likes, weโ€™re like โ€œoh shoot, this is dope, this has a real impact on the Mexican community.โ€ His son had swiped up on us, thanking us for supporting his dad.

We saw that Juan told his son to leave the competition โ€˜cause he wanted to keep going to school. I think weโ€™re one of the few bands in the industry that went to school. I have my bachelorโ€™s degree from Fresno State. It was something that really resonated with us. We had also just come off a panel there at Cornell University so everything just set the tone. We saw the map. It was 10 hours away, obviously a drive, but this opportunityโ€™s never gonna come. Weโ€™re from Cali and this is on the other side of the country and weโ€™re here now. Letโ€™s show that the Mexican community is very powerful, united. Letโ€™s go show some support to Juan and his kid. Hopefully he wins!

The last time we chatted was at the Rolling Stone showcase at SXSW. I didnโ€™t get a chance to talk to yโ€™all afterwards, during the end of your set, you sang a cover of Los Alegres del Barrancoโ€™s โ€œEl Del Palenqueโ€ which venerates the narco leader El Mencho, who was killed by Mexican forces just weeks prior. Why was it important for Clave to sing that song specifically?

Alex: โ€ŠWe just like the song. At the end of the day itโ€™s just music. Itโ€™s storytelling. Itโ€™s corridos. Thatโ€™s what corridos is all about, and thatโ€™s why I got into the music scene. We just like the song. Weโ€™re from Jalisco, from Michoacรกn. It always turns up the crowd, so we did it for the people. People want to hear corridos. Weโ€™ve been seeing the censorship going on, but at the end of the day I donโ€™t think thatโ€™s the problem. Itโ€™s a lot deeper than that, and music is just music, weโ€™re just storytelling, singing music, having fun on stage. โ€ŠI donโ€™t know if we had it in our set list or not, but I think we had just played a song prior to that that had the same tones. I was like, keep it going, letโ€™s play this one next. Nothing deep.

So it wasnโ€™t planned?

Alex: No, it wasnโ€™t. Afterwards I was like, โ€œDamn, I sang that.โ€ But, eh, who cares?

Do you guys ever get worried when you sing corridos? Or is that something that youโ€™re able to manage being from the U.S., which provides a layer of protection?

Alex: Thereโ€™s a famous dicho: El que nada debe, nada teme. Like at the end of the day we donโ€™t owe anybody anything. We do music, weโ€™re here by our own sacrifice. People that know our story know that.



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