Monterrey’s enfant-terrible Alexico is back in business. It’s been four years since the release of his outstanding debut Dios Es Lo Maximo!, which was basically an enraged essay on the Catholic Church fragmented into 33 tracks (“Mis Amigos y Yo Te Amamos is unforgettable). In the last few years he has kept himself busy working on other cool bands like Selma Oxor and White Ninja. New indie label Melodias Belafonte has announced a trilogy of videos titled Acosador de Media Noche. “Gordo, Grande y Marica” is the youth-revealing & sexually frustrated leading single (and episode II in the trilogy). The video has some great Michael Haneke coloring aesthetics, and Alexico sure knows how to rock like a well-behaved kid (nice sweater & haircut).
Video: Alexico - "Gordo, Grande y Marica"
Monterrey’s enfant-terrible Alexico is back in business. It’s been four years since the release of his outstanding debut Dios Es Lo Maximo!, which was basically an enraged essay on the Catholic Church fragmented into 33 tracks (“Mis Amigos y Yo Te Amamos is unforgettable). In the last few years he has kept himself busy working on other cool bands like Selma Oxor and White Ninja. New indie label Melodias Belafonte has announced a trilogy of videos titled Acosador de Media Noche. “Gordo, Grande y Marica” is the youth-revealing & sexually frustrated leading single (and episode II in the trilogy). The video has some great Michael Haneke coloring aesthetics, and Alexico sure knows how to rock like a well-behaved kid (nice sweater & haircut).
Monday, January 31, 2011 | Posted by Carlos Reyes at 11:35 PM 4 comments
Labels: alexico, melodias belafonte, video, videos
Turning Torso - Walker
If I may judge a book by its over for a brief moment: Upon going to Turning Torso’s official downloads page, you’ll notice that you can download his releases in virtually any format that you could desire outside of 8-track, which is admittedly quite awesome. On the other hand, when perusing the official description of the album, the very first tag listed is “Dreamwave.” Uhhhh, yeah.
Luckily, Walker, the Mexican artist’s debut LP, actually shows enough creativity to justify these fanciful portmanteaus. For the most part, the record floats by like a duck on water, with chillwave signifiers and programming forming a consistent foundation from track-to-track. Like most chillwave tropes, these tend to meander into pointlessness if extended for long periods. However, Turning Torso wisely keeps his tracks short and distinctive, making a record which lasts under a half an hour feel like its much shorter. There are certainly a handful of highlights sprinkled on this donut: the lean hooks on “True Words” and the title track could certainly pass for In Rainbows b-sides (and that’s a good thing), while “Bebé” and “Almendra” break through their lo-fi foundations into something spry and unassuming.
If there’s a problem with Walker, it’s that there are probably too many pastiches scattered throughout the record. Just by reading the tracklist alone, you can tell exactly what “Jimi,” “Milees,” “Bossa Nube,” and “80’s Dream” sound like, and you would be precisely right. There’s nothing wrong with going knee-deep into genre exercises per se, but it would have been nice for these songs to have been fleshed out a bit more. Regardless, this is a promising little record, one with way more surprises than would be expected from something called “Dreamwave.” And hey, there are plenty of worse ways to spend half an hour’s time…especially if it airs Monday nights on CBS.
Posted by Andrew Casillas at 9:42 PM 0 comments
Labels: chillwave, Community is the best show on TV that you're not watching, mexico, turning torso
A Mexican Take Away Show
La Blogotheque shot a handful of episodes for their ‘A Take Away Show’ series in Mexico last year, needless to say La Blogotheque has rarely been as colorful. The French collective had unveiled individual songs from some of the bands; most notably that great take of “Light of Day” by The Plastics Revolution, joined by a Mariachi at Xochimilco. Apparently, they’ve now released all the episodes (except for the highly rumored Café Tacvba, which might be just that, a rumor). Whoever curated the series lineup forgot about Mexico’s most exciting bands (Maria y Jose, Bam Bam, Quiero Club) but overall, the bands pulled out some amazing performances. Here are our favorites.
Friday, January 28, 2011 | Posted by Carlos Reyes at 12:54 PM 0 comments
Labels: antoine reverb, carla morrison, la blogotheque, los negretes, natalia lafourcade
Odisea Covers Juan Gabriel's "Siempre En Mi Mente"
After an all-covers compilation, we weren’t looking to include any covers on the compilation, but when Alex Anwandter told us he wanted to include a ‘JuanGa’ cover he had been working on, we were immediately on board. Juan Gabriel, who this year is returning to ‘Boleros’ (after 30 years outside the genre), is one of pop music’s greatest visionaries. “Siempre En Mi Mente” is a classic, a hard to-the-bone love song, a landmark of seduction in the Latin American songwriting field. Odisea’s version is respectful and well possessed.
Throughout the song, we get to experience little flirts of Odisea’s magic, revealing the pain of eternal love through both, sound and silence. The emotional strings in which Anwandter is able to frame the song is a reflection on his abilities to embrace the concept of authorship, and the power of lyrics themselves. Our uncouth, unwashed, and unsettled youth finds the plug-in (and the heart) to the collective social memory; when that whisper ("no encuentro nada") comes up, it's hard not to feel mobilized in some way or another.
Thursday, January 27, 2011 | Posted by Carlos Reyes at 3:37 PM 3 comments
Labels: cover, juan gabriel, odisea, stream
Fonogramáticos Volumen 11: Juventud Bruta


























02. Algodón Egipcio – “La Transformación” (Venezuela. Lefse Records)
03. Los Labios – “Calles Vacías” (Argentina. Unreleased)
04. Davila 666 – “Esa Nena Nunca Regreso” (Puerto Rico. Vice Records)
05. Odisea – “Siempre En Mi Mente” (Juan Gabriel Cover) (Chile. Unreleased)
06. Los Migues – “A Vos No Te Importa Nadie” (Argentina. Fuego Amigo Discos)
07. FRANC3S – “Devuélveme Los Estómagos Que Te Regale” (Spain. Los Enanos Gigantes)
08. Mateo de la Luna en Compañía Terrestrial – “Las Chicas de la Plaza” (Argentina. Unreleased)
09. Jessy Bulbo – “Jaslo Casvie 1” (México. Independiente)
10. El Medio – “En El Patio” (Puerto Rico. Simplemente Records)
11. She’s a Tease – “Calabozos y Princesas” (México. Nacional Records)
12. Los Claveles – “Nacional 42” (Spain. Grabaciones Grabofónicas)
13. Kali Mutsa – “Tunupa!” (Chile. Unreleased)
14. El Columpio Asesino – “Toro” (Spain. Mushroom Pillow)
15. Telepedro y Maqueta – “Hada Nada En La Nada” (México. Independiente)
16. Los Ginkas – “El Gran Salto” (Spain. Spicnic Records)
17. Collateral Soundtrack feat. Apache O’ – “Me Enamoro Cuando…” (México. Unreleased)
18. Odio Paris – “Cuando Nadie Pone Un Disco” (Spain. El Genio Equivocado)
19. Nubes En Mi Casa – “La Ventana” (Argentina. Independiente)
20. Fother Muckers – “Lobo Mayor” (Chile. Independiente)
21. hypnomango. – “El Mundo No Es Real” (México. Nene Records)
22. Franny Glass – “Ey Canción” (Uruguay. Contrapedal)
23. Valentín y Los Volcanes – “Piedras Al Lago” (Argentina. Independiente)
24. Pipe Llorens feat. Efe Loco & Chelo – “Sácame de Aquí” (Sayulita) (México. Delhotel Records)
25. Chico Unicornio – “Redención en Bahía” (Perú. Off-On Entertainment)
Monday, January 24, 2011 | Posted by Carlos Reyes at 6:50 PM 33 comments
Labels: fonogramaticos
Featured: Andrea Roca - "Buenos Salvajes"
Michita Rex
When I downloaded Andrea Roca’s Arar EP, the genre tag that came up in my iTunes was “pop gore de la periferia.” Now, I normally trust anything endorsed by Michita Rex, but that tag made me wonder what I was getting myself into. I was bracing myself for some rattling chains, clicking heels, branches scratching on window glass-type experimental obscurity. I’ll admit I was a little scared, but mostly I was really intrigued.
The genre tag was misleading, though. Instead of the conceptual and difficult to digest upon first listen music that I expected, what I got was four gorgeous ambient songs. “Buenos Salvajes” is beautiful track that starts off serenely with bird chirps, like an early morning at Walden Pond. And that’s really what the song feels like, like waking with the birds at dawn and breathing in the fresh air and just allowing yourself to be a part of it all. Roca’s voice is full and enveloping, while still being soft and tranquil and in perfect harmony with the minimal instrumentation. Even the brief entrance of the drum machine near the end, though it should be jarring and feel out of place, integrates seamlessly into the song’s storyline.
Friday, January 21, 2011 | Posted by Blanca Méndez at 8:34 AM 4 comments
Labels: andrea roca, featured, features, michita rex
Coachella 2011 Lineup
After an all-star lineup last year, Coachella has now announced the official band list that makes up 2011’s lineup. The three-day fest celebrated on April 15-17 is leaded by Kings of Leon, Arcade Fire, Kanye West and The Strokes. It’s now a regular thing to include Latin acts, we can always expect a few, and this year isn’t the exception. The big name among the Latin bands is Caifanes, the legendary Mexican band had been rumored for a while, it’s now official (they will also perform at this year’s Vive Latino). Colombia’s Bomba Estereo & DJ Erick Morillo, LA's Ozomatli, PuertoRican-American Omar Rodriguez Lopez, Chile’s Los Bunkers, Brazil’s Cansei De Ser Sexy and Spain’s Delorean are the other bands listed from our region. Congratulations.
Tuesday, January 18, 2011 | Posted by Carlos Reyes at 11:40 PM 10 comments
Labels: bomba estereo, caifanes, cansei de ser sexy, coachella, css, delorean, Los Bunkers, omar rodriguez lopez
MP3: Nuevacosta - "Nada Un Rato"
Nuevacosta might be a completely new name in the Chilean scene, but its comprising members have been around much longer than it appears. Gian Paolo Gritti (drums), Daniel Bande (keys) & Angelo Santa Cruz (base & vocals) used to be part of TV Gamma, whose debut self-titled album was among our favorites of 2010. Well, the guys have said farewell to TV Gamma, and recruited new member Karin Gildemeister on their new adventure: Nuevacosta. “Nada Un Rato” carries the aesthetics and overall mechanism of their last band, but they seem to have stripped down a few lines of their electro hyperbole. Beyond the accent, we can start to see a number of new bands highly inspired by individuals from their own generation, and that’s exciting. We're having technical difficulties uploading MP3s, but meanwhile, click on the arrow of the player, to download the track.
Posted by Carlos Reyes at 9:00 PM 3 comments
Labels: mp3, nuevacosta, tv gamma
NPR AltLatino
This is a quick special note to let you know I (Carlos Reyes) will be collaborating with NPR's AltLatino Blog a couple times a week. This is beyond exciting; having the opportunity to share the music we like with NPR's audience is a lovely thought. I have collaborated on several publications in the past, but never as exciting as this one. My first post was published today, and it's dedicated to a song about crickets, by Argentinean duo Las Liebres. This is a song that makes me cry, and therefore, you should click HERE to listen to it. While you're there, make sure to bookmark the blog, and listen to all the great shows on their archive.
Posted by Carlos Reyes at 6:00 PM 4 comments
Stream: Jennifer Lopez (feat. Pitbull) - "On the Floor"
“On the Floor” is a sad, sad disaster of a song, if you can even call it that. With its Europop leanings and lazy Pitbull guest spot, the song reeks of desperation of the kind that bald old men in Ed Hardy t-shirts exude at da club. So, maybe it will be a hit at Karma? Except not even a Jersey Shore crowd drunk out of their minds would get down to this. And for someone who seems to think she’s poised for a comeback, J.Lo isn’t even trying to be current, or even five years ago. The already tired la la la chorus is based on “Lambada.” Kaoma’s “Lambada,” y’all! At one point she even says “raise the roof,” like maybe she is yearning for a time when she was actually relevant.
Posted by Blanca Méndez at 12:23 PM 9 comments
Labels: jennifer lopez, new single, pitbull, stream, usa
Video: Adanowsky - "Un Sol Con Corazón"
Adanowsky takes on the roles of actor, writer, and director in “Un Sol Con Corazón”, easily, the best music video in his career. Shot across some very vivid Mexican cities, he takes the character of ‘Amador’ straight to the heart. This is the third single out of his latest album Amador. The initial black & white sequence shows this heartthrob approaching a beautiful woman; he first excuses himself, and later asks if she could immortalize that encounter with a kiss. What follows is a sort of Forrest Gump odyssey, except everything’s bright here and he doesn’t loose the boots for a second. Following the Run Forrest Run! Sequence, he foreshadows a future without this woman, and although full of beautiful landscapes, he would be eternally lost. Chasing love sometimes does feel like aging, Adanowsky envisions such feeling with a flourishing red rose.
Sunday, January 16, 2011 | Posted by Carlos Reyes at 12:01 AM 1 comments
Video: Linda Mirada - "José"
About two years ago, Linda Mirada had everyone dancing to her hit “San Valentin”, a song that profiled her as one of Spain’s new pop sensations. That track’s popularity and unforgiving catchiness also became an evil shadow on the rest of the album (China Es Otra Cultura). “José” has been rescued by this very cool video featuring 80s-Television aesthetics and some very well-behaved kids. I think we all have a hyperactive Jose in our lives; this song does a good job describing him. Linda Mirada signed to Discoteca Oceano last year, the house that launched people like El Guincho, Joe Crepusculo and Los Massieras to international success. According to PlayGround, the label will release a remixes EP next month, which will include a remix by Ruby Sun’s Ryan McPhun.
Saturday, January 15, 2011 | Posted by Carlos Reyes at 2:11 PM 1 comments
Labels: discoteca oceano, linda mirada, video, videos
Stream: Nacho Vegas - "La Gran Broma Final"
The always well-suited and somber Nacho Vegas has revealed several tracks from his forthcoming record La Zona Sucia. Despite being referred as one of this generation’s most prolific songwriters, he is still a divisive character. Many argue he’s too calm and monotonous; those are probably the same people that found Sofia Coppola’s dazzling Somewhere boring. We like him so much we forgive him for making an album with Bunbury. The songs unveiled were premiered recently on a Spanish radio show, and you can listen to the radio extracts here.
He may look like a reclusive, dramatic, and alienating dude, but when listening to a great song like “La Gran Broma Final”, you almost want to join him for a smoke. His inexpressiveness is the skeleton of his expressions, and the lyrics are the subjects of his emotions. Here he sings about love demolishment, the odyssey of fame, and a nation’s thirst for tabloids. Nacho Vegas is living the freedom offered by the mellowness and wisdom of his lyrics, yet he always finds a way to reinvent his composition. La Zona Sucia (his fifth solo studio album) will be out next month, on Valentine’s day.
You can now listen to the song on its proper CD-quality via Rolling Stone (Spain).
Posted by Carlos Reyes at 12:23 PM 2 comments
Labels: nacho vegas, new single, stream
Video: Klaus & Kinski - "El Rey del Mambo y La Reina de Saba"
Jenesaispop presented Klaus & Kinski’s new video “El Rey del Mambo y la Reina de Saba”, an animated misfit by Nacho Rodriguez, Gina Thorstensen & Emma Kidd. On our album review, we described the song as “a nostalgic pasodoble nod to the past.” This is the third single out of their fantastic sophomore LP Tierra, Tragalos, one of last year’s most critically acclaimed Spanish records. Animals, creatures, beasts, and objects manifest themselves to the flairs of passionate flutes full of lament and redemption. The duo is becoming one of those bands we can always count on to deliver great videos across many mediums; their aesthetics are as eclectic as their multi-dimensional albums.
Friday, January 14, 2011 | Posted by Carlos Reyes at 11:01 AM 0 comments
Labels: klaus y kinski, video, videos
Stream: Las Robertas - "Ojos Con Dientes"
Las Robertas
"Ojos Con Dientes"
Gran Derby
Wednesday, January 12, 2011 | Posted by Carlos Reyes at 9:34 AM 2 comments
Labels: las robertas, reina republicana
Featured: Pipe Llorens feat. Elis Paprika - "Ven a mi casa a ver Donnie Darko"
Posted by Carlos Reyes at 3:16 AM 5 comments
Labels: delhotel, delhotel records, elis paprika, featured, features, pipe llorens
MP3: Lê Almeida - “Eles estão na minha rua”
Lê Almeida
“Eles estão na minha rua”
Weepop Records
Lê Almeida is one of the coolest Brazilian dudes we’ve come across; he lives the lo-fi style life like very few know how to, starting with the fact he’s the founder/head of Brazil's youth-rushed netlabel Transfusão Noise Records. After dedicating time to his side projects, and a handful of EPs under his arm, his debut LP Mono Maçã has finally seen the commercial light. “Eles estão na minha rua” is an extract from the record, a track that finds Almeida on its most structured moment yet. Beyond the noise-revivalist sound, he definitely shares the lo-fi aesthetic and the urgency to tell stories in very short timings. This song breaks most of those principles. Like some of his fellow Latin American lo-fiers (Las Robertas, Babe Florida, Hypnomango), there are tropical flairs embedded with the sound, so often confused as psychedelic. Mono Maçã is out now on London’s Weepop Records.
Tuesday, January 11, 2011 | Posted by Carlos Reyes at 11:43 AM 0 comments
Labels: brazil, le almeida, lo-fi, mp3, transfusao noise records
Video: Michael Mike - "Lo Que A Vos El Amor"
The guys from Michael Mike picked a windy day to shoot their new clip “Lo Que a Vos El Amor” (directed by Estudio Soda), the best song off their album Nena o Neno. If you’ve been looking for a song that will make you want to try everything on your wardrobe (like those great Fangoria songs used to), this could be it. The video introduces a series of peculiar characters, starting with an intimidating woman wearing a stunning red dress. She founds herself in good company right quick by the most random people. A much younger guy keeps an eye on her from a distance, she flirts with him all along The magnetizing lady has so much appeal you would confuse this apartment complex with a mental institute.
Friday, January 7, 2011 | Posted by Carlos Reyes at 10:33 AM 4 comments
Labels: michael mike, video, videos
Club Fonograma's Bands to Watch 2011
20. Alex Anwandter + Gepe
The news of an Anwandter-Gepe supergroup have been speculated for so long it was starting to look like a big joke. We’ve asked them directly and they are in fact, on their way to finishing their first album together. Anwandter’s eccentrics and Gepe’s responsiveness could add up to something truly majestic. In theory, it should be #1, but since we have yet to hear a finished track from the duo, it's only fair to keep it at the bottom of the list, for now.
19. Lost Mapaches
Independiente.
"YYY" (Pepepe Remix) ♫♫♫





13. Narwhal
Independiente. "Galapagos"
12. Hypnomango We started out our Hypnomango’s “El Mundo No Es Real” feature claiming it was our favorite new song, part as a joke since the year is only a few days old, but really, this song already has an assured spot on next year’s Best of the Year countdown. This Monterrey-based band has all the qualities of a revelation, and its debut EP is only a few weeks away, seems like another treasure of the Nene Records catalog.
11. Odio París
El Genio Equivocado. "Ahora Sabes" ♫♫♫
10. Los ClavelesIf we were willing to put our hands on fire for a new Spanish rock band this year, it would probably be for Los Claveles. Their half of the Split album they shared with Kana Kapila last year has been haunting us lately and we can't wait for a full-length album. The smoky rolls rise and fall among their short-length songs, so much you’ll start seeing ravens after a while. “Con el dinero en la mano me gustas mas.”
09. El Medio Leonardo Balasques, better known as El Medio will be Puerto Rico’s true export this year. He is one of those one-man bands that are almost defined by the author’s great music taste, which he has shown plenty of. His cover of Los Punsetes’ “Tus Amigos” was by consensus, one of the best tracks in Nosotros Los Rockers, and his track “Que bueno que nadie piensa en mi” is the warmest song about loneliness and the human spirit you can possibly think of.
08. Mateo de la Luna en Compañia Terrestrial
Independiente. "La Energía de los Planetas"
o7. Pipe LlorensNot that new to a small sector of our audience, but the follow up to his hit “Dame Un Besito” should bring Pipe Llorens the deserving attention that has made him one of the most interesting personas in Mexican music. A weird melt of Kanye, Ariel Pink & Beck’s egos. Coahuila’s bad boy (as we call him), tells it straight, he is confronting and sort of a brave Hip Hop hero as well.
06. Los Migues
Independiente. "Cuantos Mutantes" ♫♫♫
05. Bam Bam
Arts & Crafts MX. "Preview"
04. Los Espíritus If “Besito” and “Pacifico-Atlántico” didn’t do the trick for you, perhaps more songs will help. The superduo comprised by Antonio Jimenez (Maria y Jose) and Lido Pimienta promise to deliver more off-your-seat tunes this year. Tijuana and Barranquilla reunite via the clever minds of two individuals who are already making some of today’s most exciting music on their own.
03. Adrianigual
Independiente. "La Mistica Espiral" ♫♫♫
02. Fakuta
Michita Rex. "Las Partes" ♫♫♫
01. Algodón Egipcio Venezuelan one-man act Algodón Egipcio made all the right moves last year to salivate us all for his forthcoming debut album La Lucha Constante (out on Lefse Records soon). In the past year he released spectacular covers of Piyama Party, Male Bonding and Of Montreal, remixed Las Robertas, Maria y Jose, and Teengirl Fantasy, but it's the original content we can’t stop listening to. Cheky’s pop skills put him in front of the game; he’s making larger-than-life dream songs, scientific adventures, and they’re danceable and intuitive, the album sure smells like a knockout.
Wednesday, January 5, 2011 | Posted by Carlos Reyes at 10:25 PM 14 comments
Labels: 2011, bands to watch, lists








