Monday, October 5, 2009

Los Kipus - folkloric cumbia

The trio Los Kipus have been playing together for 50 years and taking traditional Peruvian folk with the occasional cumbia organ. They formed in 1955 when Luis Abanto Morales and Paco Maceda were 21, with Marcela Luna joining slightly later.



Great keys and vocal harmonies here and the video is a photo of a a girl from Chivay near Canyon Del Colca in Peru, who are known for their amazing hats (photo from my journey there below vid):



Sunday, October 4, 2009

Covers of Los Hijos del Sol's "Cariñito"

I'm back in the US, my dog is great, and I'm able to sit down and digest these jams with my own computer, finally being able to make some mixes of what I've been immersed in for a past few months. Here are a couple of covers of the Los Hijos del Sol's big track "Cariñito." The track is often covered by local bands during live shows or put onto demos, always a staple to perfect if you want to get a lot of gigs. Here are a couple different takes on it, separated by about 25 years and varying in sound quality.

This version done by Los Flamencos has a slightly out of tune keyboard/guitar dynamic going on, not totally sharp, but a nice grainy production quality, making it as raw as your first attempts with a 4-track. They were part of the Iquitos jungle sound with other bands like Juaneco Y Sus Combo. Tune in on this:

Los Flamencos - Cariñito


Now here goes a version by cumbia/reggae/ska group Bareto, hometown heroes of the Barranco neighborhood in Lima. Of course, it's blessed with a pair of real life calendar girls shakin it on stage with them. I picked up a Barato mixtape and this song was not on it, so not sure if there's actually a recorded version of it.



Here's a version by a group who's name I haven't discovered yet. All these videos so far mandate a lot of booty for this particular track.



And then the original version performed live by Los Hijos Del Sol (with booty):



Grab that here, from an earlier post: Los Hijos Del Sol - Carinito

Monday, September 7, 2009

Thinking again about Charly Garcia

I´ve been very lucky on this trip because I´ve been finding some really great jams on the daily basis in formats that don´t usually function with the hostel I´m staying at. But luckily tonight, in Mendoza, Argentina, I found a place with a tape player. I thought I´d only be able to listen to tapes in my mom´s Buick, driving to get pastries at Cohen´s Bakery, but they had one here.

I had a long week in Buenos Aires. It´s very easy to have big nights there- starting your dinner at midnight, wrapping up around two, and then dancing till dawn with no probelms, which happened 7/8 nights. But on my last day, deciding whether to stay for the night or not, I walked around and found a cassette of Charly Garcia´s at a flea market (the "Modern Clicks" or "Clix Moderno" album), that sold choripan and G-N-R shirts.

I posted an item about him earlier and was not expecting to write about him again, buy the tape was great- really stellar 80s jams with a darker influence that Argentinians really love. Perfect mix of hostel resources and things I´ve been grazing on to make my night complete.

Before I get on the uploading of the tape, take a look at some more insight on Charly Garcia. The tape drove me to Youtube.gov:



an interview:



I really wasn´t wild about the Che song from below, but Argentinian enthusiasm for this man made me but the tape (see the comments on this vid). I hate to attach a western comparison to him, but he has the pop sensibilities of Elvis Costello and the lunacy of Charles Manson, save the bloodshed, all wrapped nearly 30 years of recording.

Here´s the track off the 1983 album "Modern Clix" that got me feelin him again:



another I discovered aroun:

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Kumbia Queers - just what I was looking for



This band is exciting! Lead singer Ali Gau Gau moved from Mexico to Buenos Aires wanting to start some kind of new cumbia with punk influences. After coming up with the killer name "Kumbia Queers," the band formed and started doing cumbia covers of Sabbath, The Cure, and Madonna.

Everywhere you go in South America, homes, restaurants, etc., they have calendars of beer ads with very scantily clad women on them. I have seen one directly next to a photo of the Virgin Mary, too. Here´s a little homage to them:

Kumbia Queers - Chica De Calendario


With the Cure´s "Lovesong" as the backing track, Kumbia Dark got me laughing:

Kumbia Queers - Kumbia Dark


And a cover of Madonna´s "Like a Prayer"

Kumbia Queers - La Isla Con Chikas

Get at ém: http://www.myspace.com/laskumbiaqueers

Friday, September 4, 2009

Cabeza Crew here in Buenos Aires



Some wild, electrocumbia and dub mash ups here, with jams from Buju Banton, Prince, Marvin Gaye and some modern cumbia. Got in touch with these guys through my main point of contact here, cool fellow who runs La Cigale bar and a friend of DJ Dub Insurgent from back in New Orleans.

They have some electrocumbia parties at Club 69 and they´re having another one tonight at Niceto Club on Nicete Vega 5510. Get down if you´re in town!

CABEZA! 004 - Cumbia Booty - Sonido del Principe - 2009

Friday, August 28, 2009

The pride of Argentina - Charly Garcia




Upon arrival in the town of San Carlos de Bariloche, Argentina, I sought out chomp on some famous Argentinian steak. Steak and wine, I thought, would be my diet for the rest of the month. So far on this trip, every expectation I had of each country has been wrong. I thought that the loathing Chileans whad for former dictator Augustus Pinochet would be so viscous that I´d be able to swipe it off the walls of La Moneda (the Presidential palace), where his army overthrew and killed democratically elected President Salvador Allende on September 11th, 1973. That wasn´t the case - most Chileans still hate him, but they´re over it; they´ve got a progressive woman president in Michelle Bachelet. They´re looking into the future and not dwelling on the past.

I thought Bolivia would be more dangerous than it was, as well. My friend and I went to an Iron Maiden tribute show in La Paz and most of the guys with nicks and cuts on their faces wanted to give us some beer, not take our wallets. So one thing this trip taught me is to never have preconceived notions about anything while travelling. That was until I discovered the magic of Argentinian steak. It certainly lives up to its rep.

Another thing I noticed is that radio here only plays Argentinian music. In Peru and Bolivia, I heard everything from Rick Astley to Pearl Jam, with only a few songs in Spanish on popular radio. There are several reasons for this. Argentina is quite larger than other countries down here and has quite a booming music industry. The 80s music at almost any club in South America is probably from here.

Argentina´s pride and joy is a fella named Charly Garcia. Charly, fresh out of rehab, has a new single about all the folks who wear Che Guevara shirts. Charly says, "Hey, if you wear the shirt...You should know why."

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Internet here in Argentina is slowwwwwwwwwwwww


Sorry for fewer updates! The jams are still here, but the connection is daaaaaaaaaaang slow. Like, I tried uploading a zip file to megaupload and it failed three times.

But here goes a killer podcast from Nuts to Soup:
OBA TI DE AFRICAN MIX

Definitely feelin these here jams, get it in!!