El Lavaplatos

By Jesus Osorio and Manuel Camacho (Victor 46944), 1930

This corrido tells the story of a man who dreams about being a movie star and migrates to California after the Mexican Revolution. He works in the fields and later gets a job as a dishwasher. The narrator returns to Mexico, where he’s forced to admit that his movie stardom will never come. The corrido can be interpreted as either a comedy or a tragedy, and its popularity led to many other songs about repatriation and the disillusionment which many Mexican immigrants felt after coming to the U.S.

Spanish

Soñaba en mi juventud
Ser una estrella del cine
Y un día de tantos me vine
A visitar Hollywood

Un día, muy desesperado
Por tanta revolución
Me pasé para este lado
Sin pagar la emigración

¡Qué vacilada, qué vacilada
Me pasé sin pagar nada!

Al llegar a la estación
Me tropecé con un cuate
Que me hizo la invitación
Ee trabajar en el traque

Yo el traque me suponía
Que sería algún almacén
Y era componer la vía
Por donde camina el tren

¡Ay que mi cuate, ay que mi cuate
Cómo me llevó pal traque!

Cuando me enfadé del traque
Me volvió a invitar aquel
A la pizca del tomate
Y a desahijar betabel

Y allí me gané indulgencias
Caminando de rodillas
Como cuatro o cinco millas
Que dieron de penitencia

¡Ay que trabajos tan mal pagados
Por andar arrodillados!

Mi cuate, que no era maje
Se siguió dándole guerra
Y al completar su pasaje
Se devolvió pa’ su tierra

Yo hice cualquier bicoca
y me fui para Sacramento
Cuando no tenía ni soca
Tuve que entrarle al cemento

Ay, que tormento, ay, que tormento
Es el mentado cemento

English

I dreamed in my youth
Of being a movie star
And one of those days
I come to see Hollywood

One day very desparate
Because of so many revolutions
I crossed the border
Without paying the immigration fee

What a fast one, What a fast one
I crossed without paying anything

When I arrived at the station
I ran into a friend
Who invited me
To work on “The Track”

I thought “The Track”
Would be some kind of store
And it was to repair the road
Where the train ran

Oh, my friend! Oh, my friend!
He took me to the track

When I became angry with the track
He invited me again
This time to pick tomatoes
and gathering of beets

And there I earned indulgence
Walking on my knees
Four or five miles
They gave me as penance

Oh, what work, and so poorly paid
For going on one’s knees

My friend who was no fool
Continued giving them a bad time
And on completing enough for his fare
He returned to his land

And I earned but a trifle
And I left for Sacramento
When I had nothing
I had to work with cement

Oh, What a torment, oh, what a torment
Is that famous cement

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