La Voz... México
La Voz... México | |
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Genre | Reality show |
Created by |
John de Mol Roel van Velzen |
Directed by | Miguel Angel Fox |
Presented by |
Host Mark Tacher (2011) Jacqueline Bracamontes (2012–) Backstage Cynthia Urias (2011–12) Lidia Ávila (2013) Paty Cantú (2014) Natalia Téllez (2016–) |
Judges |
Current Alejandro Sanz(1, 5) Gloria Trevi(5) J Balvin(5) Los Tigres del Norte(5) Former Espinoza Paz(1) Aleks Syntek(1) Lucero(1) Jenni Rivera(†)(2) Miguel Bosé(2) Beto Cuevas(2) Paulina Rubio(2) Marco Antonio Solís(3) David Bisbal(3) Alejandra Guzmán(3) Wisin & Yandel(3) Julión Álvarez(4) Laura Pausini(4) Ricky Martin(4) Yuri(4) |
Country of origin | Mexico |
Original language(s) | Spanish |
No. of seasons | 5[1] |
No. of episodes | 60 |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Miguel Angel Fox |
Production company(s) | Televisa |
Distributor | Televisa |
Release | |
Original network | Canal de las Estrellas |
First shown in | September 11, 2011 |
Original release | September 11, 2011 – present |
External links | |
La Voz |
La Voz... México (English: The Voice... Mexico) is a reality show and singing competition based on the format of The Voice originated in the Netherlands and part of the international franchise The Voice created by television producer John de Mol.[2] Mexico is the first Spanish-speaking country to adapt this format and the first among 6 globally. The show began its first season on September 11, 2011, under the production of Televisa executive producer Miguel Angel Fox. The series' first episode scored a rating of 28.2/47.1, surpassing Spanish-language TV series La Academia rating of 9.6/17.[3][4] The second season began on September 9, 2012 as scheduled,[1] though was slightly delayed before the airing of its final episode due to the death of judge Jenni Rivera, who died in a plane crash in Iturbide, Nuevo León on December 9, 2012, dedicating an entire episode as a tribute to the late singer.
Program
The official website says of the program:
(The Voice... Mexico) is a television program that sets aside the appearance of any competitor, that matters is finding a new voice to the end the program. The Voice... Mexico tries to find candidates with real vocal skills. And for that, four major music stars, are responsible for finding and training the next great Voice of Mexico. "[5]
This program has already become a very famous, because unlike other programs so far, this is divided into three parts and the artist do not have to be locked up almost half a year with teachers in a school.[5]
Coaches and contestants
Alejandro Sanz, Espinoza Paz, Lucero, and Aleks Syntek are the coaches and vocal mentors. Contestants are listed in order of their ranking from their respective seasons.
Miguel Bosé, Paulina Rubio, Beto Cuevas and Jenni Rivera (†) were the coaches of season 2; Jenni Rivera died in plane crash on December 9 a day before the semifinals.
Season 3 Coaches were Wisin & Yandel, Alejandra Guzman, David Bisbal and Marco Antonio Solís.
Season 4 Coaches were a Ricky Martin, Laura Pausini, Julión Álvarez and Yuri.
Season 5 Coaches were a Alejandro Sanz, Los Tigres del Norte, Gloria Trevi and J Balvin.
- – Winning Coach/Contestant. Winners are in bold, eliminated contestants in small font.
- – Runner-Up Coach/Contestant. Final contestant First listed.
- – 3rd Place Coach/Contestant. Final contestant First listed.
- – 4th Place Coach/Contestant. Final contestant First listed.
Season | Judges/Coaches | |||
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Alejandro Sanz | Lucero | Espinoza Paz | Aleks Syntek | |
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2 | Miguel Bosé | Paulina Rubio | Jenni Rivera (†) | Beto Cuevas |
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3 | David Bisbal | Alejandra Guzmán | Marco Antonio Solís | Wisin & Yandel |
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4 | Ricky Martin | Laura Pausini | Julión Álvarez | Yuri |
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5 | Alejandro Sanz | Los Tigres del Norte | Gloria Trevi | J Balvin |
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Coaches timeline
Seasons
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Season | Premiere | Finale | Winner | Second place | Third place | Fourth place | Host | Backstage Host |
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1 | September 11, 2011 | December 18, 2011 | Óscar Cruz | Alejandra Orozco | Óscar Garrido | Gabriel Navarro | Mark Tacher | Cynthia Urias |
2[1] | September 9, 2012 | December 16, 2012 | Luz M. Ramírez | Miguel & Alejandro | Gerardo Bazua | Ximena Villalón | Jacqueline Bracamontes | |
3 | September 8, 2013 | December 15, 2013 | Marcos Razo | Willy Espinoza | Carolina Ross | Kate Botello | Lidia Ávila | |
4 | September 7, 2014 | December 14, 2014 | Guido Rochin | Kike Jimenez | Agina Alvarez | Natalia Sosa | Paty Cantú | |
5 | April 24, 2016 | July 31, 2016 | Yuliana Martínez | Eddy Ray | Poncho Arocha | Jorge Eduardo | Natalia Téllez |
Participants
2011
- Alejandro Jano Fuentes (1979–2016)[7][8]
Format
The series consists of three phases: a blind audition, a battle phase, and live performance shows. Four judges/coaches, all noteworthy recording artists, choose teams of contestants through a blind audition process.
First Phase - The Blind Auditions
Each judge has the length of the auditioner's performance (about one minute) to decide if he or she wants that singer on his or her team; if two or more judges want the same singer (as happens frequently), the singer has the final choice of coach. Each team of singers (12 per team) is mentored and developed by its respective coach.
Second Phase - The Battle Rounds
In the second stage, called The Battle Rounds, coaches have two of their team members battle against each other directly by singing the same song together, with the coach choosing which team member to advance from each of individual "Battles" into the first live round.
Third Phase - The Rescue
In the second season, it was added a new stage in which, coaches can save a member of their team that has been eliminated in the Round of Battles, in this new stage, each coach will select two eliminated contestants, they are assigned a different song and fight. In the end only one of them wins and continue on Live Shows.
Fourth Phase - The Live Performance Shows
Within the first live show, the surviving acts from each team again compete head-to-head, with public votes determining one of five acts from each team that will advance to the Final Eight, while the coach chooses which of the remaining three acts comprises the other performer remaining on the team.
In the final phase, the remaining contestants compete against each other in live broadcasts for the public's vote. The television audience and the coaches have equal say 50/50 in deciding who moves on to the Final 4 phase. With one team member remaining for each coach, the (Final 4) contestants compete against each other in the finale with the outcome decided solely by public vote.
References
- 1 2 3 El Universal. "Ya preparan segunda temporada de La voz... México" (in Spanish). Retrieved 2011-12-19.
- ↑ "The Voice of" (in Spanish). Archived from the original on December 29, 2011. Retrieved 2011-12-19.
- ↑ "Voz drowns out competition". Variety. 24 September 2011. Retrieved 21 July 2012.
- ↑ "'La Voz México' triplica rating de 'La Academia 2011'" (in Spanish). Terra Networks. 14 September 2011.
- 1 2 Televisa Networks. "Official site of The Voice Mexico" (in Spanish). Retrieved December 19, 2011.
- ↑ "Matan a tiros a Jano Fuentes, ex concursante de 'La Voz' México". www.europafm.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 2016-06-19.
- ↑ "Singer on Mexico's The Voice killed in Chicago shooting". CBC News. Retrieved 2016-06-22.
- ↑ "El cantante mexicano Alejandro Fuentes muere tras tiroteo en Chicago - El Diario de Yucatán". El Diario de Yucatán (in Spanish). 2016-06-19. Retrieved 2016-06-22.