NAME:
La Texana
ABOUT
La Texana, the project of Josué Ramírez, was born in early 2021 in Tijuana, Baja California. With a laptop and a guitar, the musician recorded his first material at the age of 17. His sound is strongly influenced by Spanish-language alternative rock and a powerful wave of emerging music with post-punk undertones.
In 2021, he debuted with “Nunca He Sabido Amar.” Just two years later, he released his first EP, Morro, where he connects with his audience across five tracks, including standouts “Un Día Como Hoy” and “Estrés.” In its first six months, Morro reached 600K plays and has now grown to 6.5 million streams across platforms.
By 2025, La Texana presents his first studio album, La Casa Que Cae, a 10-track full-length that explores the search for identity and the uncertainty of starting something new. The album, produced by Sonido Muchacho, reached 2 million streams on its release day and climbed to 8 million just two months later. This record includes the singles “Terco,” “El Sol,” and “Dispara.”
In May 2025, La Texana performed for the first time at the Lunario del Auditorio Nacional in a sold-out show, where he presented La Casa Que Cae. In 2026, the musician performed at the Teatro Metropólitan with a sold-out crowd of 3,000 people, marking the largest audience of his career. That same year, he performed in more than 30 cities, including across South America and the United States, where he was part of the SXSW festival and was recognized with the Grulke Prize as Developing Non-U.S. Act 2026.
La Texana has more than 200K monthly listeners and over 8 million streams across major streaming platforms, including music videos for “Desgárrame,” “Terco,” “Siempre Me Cuesta Regresar,” and “El Sol.” A digital phenomenon, he has built strong communities on Instagram (27K), TikTok (15K), and YouTube (40K).
La Texana’s style continues to evolve, exploring new threads of alternative rock, his vulnerable lyricism, and the nostalgic sound that has defined him—now alongside a new generation of Mexican musicians while expanding his audience internationally.
ExpandIn 2021, he debuted with “Nunca He Sabido Amar.” Just two years later, he released his first EP, Morro, where he connects with his audience across five tracks, including standouts “Un Día Como Hoy” and “Estrés.” In its first six months, Morro reached 600K plays and has now grown to 6.5 million streams across platforms.
By 2025, La Texana presents his first studio album, La Casa Que Cae, a 10-track full-length that explores the search for identity and the uncertainty of starting something new. The album, produced by Sonido Muchacho, reached 2 million streams on its release day and climbed to 8 million just two months later. This record includes the singles “Terco,” “El Sol,” and “Dispara.”
In May 2025, La Texana performed for the first time at the Lunario del Auditorio Nacional in a sold-out show, where he presented La Casa Que Cae. In 2026, the musician performed at the Teatro Metropólitan with a sold-out crowd of 3,000 people, marking the largest audience of his career. That same year, he performed in more than 30 cities, including across South America and the United States, where he was part of the SXSW festival and was recognized with the Grulke Prize as Developing Non-U.S. Act 2026.
La Texana has more than 200K monthly listeners and over 8 million streams across major streaming platforms, including music videos for “Desgárrame,” “Terco,” “Siempre Me Cuesta Regresar,” and “El Sol.” A digital phenomenon, he has built strong communities on Instagram (27K), TikTok (15K), and YouTube (40K).
La Texana’s style continues to evolve, exploring new threads of alternative rock, his vulnerable lyricism, and the nostalgic sound that has defined him—now alongside a new generation of Mexican musicians while expanding his audience internationally.





