Raul Malo of The Mavericks performs during the Americana Music Association Awards ceremony at the Ryman Auditorium Wednesday, Sept. 22, 2021 in Nashville, Tenn. Americana Awards

Raul Malo, Mavericks Vocalist Whose Sound Transformed Country Music, Dies at 60

Raul Malo, the soulful and genre-defying frontman of The Mavericks, has died after a battle with cancer. He was 60. Known for a voice that blended operatic power with heart-wrenching tenderness, Malo helped reshape what country music could be — fusing Latin, rock, swing, and roots traditions into something uniquely his own.

A Singer Who Broke Boundaries

Born Raul Francisco Martínez-Malo Jr., Malo co-founded The Mavericks in 1989 in Miami. Over the decades, the band came to be celebrated — and sometimes hard to categorize — because of their ability to move fluidly between Americana, country rock, Tex-Mex, swing, Latin, and other influences. Malo’s voice, described by some as a velvety baritone soaring into operatic highs, anchored that fluid sound.

His writing and musicianship broadened the palette of mainstream country. Through The Mavericks and his solo work, he offered listeners rich, multicultural, multi-lingual music — often in English and Spanish — challenging conventional genre boundaries.

Final Years and Health Battle

In June 2024, Malo revealed he had been diagnosed with cancer and began treatment. As 2025 progressed, his illness worsened. According to Fox News, back in September, he disclosed he had developed a rare and serious complication, leptomeningeal disease (LMD), when cancer spread to the membranes surrounding his brain and spinal cord. The band cancelled remaining tour dates, and Malo sought treatment in Houston.

According to WSLS, on December 8, 2025, his wife, Betty Malo, announced his passing. “He was called to do another gig — this time in the sky,” she wrote. “No one embodied life and love, joy and passion, family, friends, music, and adventure the way our beloved Raul did.”

His Enduring Legacy

Malo leaves behind a body of work that continues to resonate — albums in English and Spanish, songs that cross cultural and musical lines, and a standard for artistic daring in country and Americana. Fans and fellow musicians will remember him not only for his extraordinary voice but for his willingness to push boundaries and bring people together through music.



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