All corrections
Wikipedia April 6, 2026 at 07:21 PM

es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los_Tigres_del_Norte

4 corrections found

1
Claim
ha logrado ganar 6 premios Grammy y 12 Grammy latino
Correction

The award totals in this sentence are incorrect. Official Grammy and Latin Grammy artist pages currently list Los Tigres del Norte with 7 Grammy wins and 8 Latin Grammy wins, not 6 and 12.

Full reasoning

The claim gives specific award counts, so it can be checked directly against the academies’ own artist pages.

  • The Recording Academy’s official artist page for Los Tigres Del Norte says they have “WINS 7”* and “NOMINATIONS 16”* through the 2026 Grammy Awards.
  • The Latin Recording Academy’s official artist page for Los Tigres Del Norte says they have “WINS 8”* and “NOMINATIONS 14”* through the 26th Latin Grammy Awards.

Because the official totals are 7 Grammys and 8 Latin Grammys, the article’s statement that they have won 6 Grammys and 12 Latin Grammys is factually wrong.

2 sources
2
Claim
cuando ya Jorge contaba 22 años
Correction

Jorge Hernández was not 22 when the group first went to San Jose and received the name Los Tigres del Norte. UCLA’s Frontera history places that trip in 1967, and the same source gives Jorge’s birth year as 1954, so he would have been about 13, not 22.

Full reasoning

This sentence gives an age for Jorge Hernández at the moment Los Tigres del Norte first traveled to the United States and were named.

An authoritative UCLA/Strachwitz Frontera biography of the band states two relevant facts:

  1. Jorge, the eldest son, was born in 1954.
  2. After the Soledad prison performance, the promoter brought the band to San Jose for the city’s first official Mexican Independence Day celebration on September 16, 1967.

If Jorge was born in 1954 and the San Jose trip occurred in 1967, he would have been roughly 13 years old, not 22. So the article’s age is off by about nine years.

1 source
  • Los Tigres Del Norte | Strachwitz Frontera Collection

    Jorge, the eldest son, born in 1954 ... After the prison performance, the promoter brought the group to San Jose ... it planned to celebrate its very first official Mexican Independence Day the following month, on September 16, 1967.

3
Claim
Este disco fue conocido como «Juana La traicionera» / «Por el amor a mis hijos», el primer disco que editaron Los Tigres Del Norte.
Correction

UCLA’s Frontera history says Los Tigres del Norte’s inaugural recording was the single “De un Rancho a Otro,” not “Juana La traicionera / Por el amor a mis hijos.”

Full reasoning

The article identifies a specific release as the band’s first record. UCLA’s Strachwitz Frontera Collection—an authoritative archive closely tied to Los Tigres del Norte’s own preservation work—states otherwise.

Its band biography says Art Walker took the group to Fresno to make their inaugural recording, and names that first recording explicitly as the single “De un Rancho a Otro.”

Because the source identifies a different title as the band’s first recording, the statement that their first record was “Juana La traicionera / Por el amor a mis hijos” is incorrect.

1 source
4
Claim
De Paisano a Paisano Ganadores
Correction

The table incorrectly marks “De Paisano a Paisano” as a Latin Grammy winner. The Latin Recording Academy lists it as a nomination, while the 2nd Annual winner in Norteño Album was “Quémame Los Ojos/Amigos Del Alma.”

Full reasoning

This entry appears in the Premios Grammy Latinos table and labels “De Paisano a Paisano” as “Ganadores.” Official Latin Recording Academy sources contradict that.

  • The Latin Academy page for Lupe Olivo lists “De Paisano A Paisano” at the 2nd Annual Latin GRAMMY as “NOMINADO” in Norteño Album.
  • A separate official Latin Academy artist page shows the 2nd Annual Latin GRAMMY winner in Norteño Album was “Quémame Los Ojos/Amigos Del Alma” by José Roberto Martínez.

So the article’s table is wrong to mark De Paisano a Paisano as a winner in that 2001 entry.

2 sources
Model: OPENAI_GPT_5 Prompt: v1.16.0