The origins of La Pestilencia can be traced back to 1986, when
Héctor Buitrago was a DJ on a Bogotá radio station, playing the punk records that a relative had brought him from the UK. Dilson Díaz, a fan of the show from Medellín, contacted Buitrago to meet up in Bogotá and show Buitrago the punk records that Díaz owned, which developed into an idea to form their own group. The pair soon recruited guitarist Francisco Nieto and drummer Jorge León Piñeda, and began practicing in the house of Buitrago's mother in the working-class Bogotá
barrio of Restrepo. The group's early concerts featured cover versions of Spanish and Brazilian rock bands, but they soon began to write and develop the songs that would form their debut album,
La muerte... un compromiso de todos (1989). Although the band members themselves were strongly against drugs and violence, the fans at their gigs often caused chaos and damage which the band were forced to pay for, and this, plus a despondency that the album would never be noticed, caused the original line-up to split soon after the album's release. Buitrago went on to form
Aterciopelados with
Andrea Echeverri, while guitarist Nieto formed Neurosis and then La Derecha, both successful rock bands within Colombia. León left La Pestilencia after the recording of their second album and joined Aterciopelados for a short while, before forming his own bands Excalibur and Estrato Social. By the time of the latter record's release La Pestilencia had become a popular live act, and a regular fixture at Bogotá's Rock al Parque festival, the largest hard rock and metal festival in the country, and their growing popularity had generated belated interest in the group's 1989 debut album. The group ended the decade by playing to 100,000 people as the support act to
Metallica in Bogotá's
Simón Bolívar Park in May 1999. Having released their first three albums on independent labels in Colombia, in 2000 La Pestilencia signed with a major label,
Mercury Records, as Díaz felt it was important to spread the group's message beyond Colombia to other countries with Spanish-speaking populations. The group relocated to Los Angeles where they recorded their fourth album
Balística (2001). Following another move to
EMI Records,
Productos Desaparecidos (2005) saw the band begin to incorporate synthesizers and other instruments into their sound, and the album was nominated for a
Latin Grammy Award for Best Recording Package, as well as attaining a gold disc in their home country, the first ever gold disc for a punk or hard rock band in Colombia. In 2011 the band released their sixth album,
Paranormal, and their seventh album was released in 2018. == Members ==