By the finish of 1992, young Mexican learners Miguel Olague and José Rodríguez met while performing within their school’s band. In 1993, Olague and Rodríguez asked Salvador Loya to become listed on them within a new task known as La Calle, playing addresses of well-known Latin rock works such as Soda pop Stereo, Guyá, and Caifanes. La Calle was afterwards joined up with by keyboardist Gustavo Avila and ex-El Poste Francisco Zamora. Even so, the original people were looking because of their own identity. Predicated on that idea, the band split up in July of 1994, acquiring their first rung on the ladder to make a new rock group known as Cuarto Obscuro, prearranged by Olague, Rodríguez, keyboardist Gustavo Avila, bassist David Prieto and drummer Leonel Cuesta.