Showing posts with label ecuador. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ecuador. Show all posts

Maria Usbeck - “Moai Y Yo”

Photo credit: Holland Brown
Maria Usbeck, former lead singer of the band Selebrities, dropped “Moai Y Yo” via The FADER last night, which then immediately had us wondering: Who Is She. Born in Ecuador and currently based in New York, the singer/producer is now promoting an upcoming solo record which promises serene pop born out of an existential crises from losing touch with her mother tongue. Usbeck later took it on herself to reconnect with her language and culture, all of which has aided her in building a more meaningful musical identity. One that is waiting to be unveiled in her album Amparo.

“Moai Y Yo” rises at sun salutation only to be carried off by gentle harmonies. The arrangements are simple but extremely rich. The singer pulls in harps and other ornate sounds that often recall Ramona Lisa (Chairlift's Caroline Polachek, who is actually listed as co-producer), an influence that becomes more pronounced through the Rapa Nui chants chained to the vocal patterns. Usbeck stretches the tonal canvas to its absolute limit. Reaching its conclusion it is hard not to feel elated both from the music and the impression of the discovery (“Te busqué, te encontré”). Maria Usbeck, welcome to the club.

Amparo is out May 27 via Cascine / Labrador

Helado Negro - Canta Lechuza

Canta Lechuza, Helado Negro

Asthmatic Kitty, USA

Rating: 83

by Adrian Mata Anaya



At this juncture in time, there is an overlapping presence of traditional instruments and electronic production tools. Yet, only a few folk artists play around in the surmounting pile of electronic gadgetry. During this embargo, we find an exception and a pioneer in Roberto Carlos Lange as Helado Negro. While previous work, Awe Oak, introduced an already dynamic Latin American folk artist, Canta Lechuza audaciously navigates through a new fertile territory in the same Latin folk vehicle, now powered by electronic energy.



Canta Lechuza is a digital time-lapse photograph of the surrounding natural environment, which was taken during Lange’s month-long residence in Connecticut. While Lange actively processes his surrounding space and its organic life, he anachronistically places sound sculptures to visualize anatomical and atomic structures of nature. To do so, mischievously naïve bass lines are placed to elevate jazz-like improvisations of organic computer noises, as found in “Lechugilla.” In a similar fashion to sonar, oscilloscope frequencies bounce off trees establishing spatial dimensions. Climate is quickly actualized by freezing and crisp resonance in opening track, “Globitos.”



By now, readers of Club Fonograma might be keenly aware of Lange's exploits in projects such as ROM, Savath y Savalas, and Epstein. Lange proves that his scope expands beyond these creative endeavors through his powerful ability to reference outside of himself. Appropriating the ocean wave distortions of chillwave, “Regresa” introduces a snowstorm of distortion and feedback. Typical of Wham City’s Future Islands, “2º Dia” rehashes emotional scars with its use of '80s-throwback guitar strumming. In the record’s most impressive display of music knowledge, “Calculas” is an assembly line of sacrifices back to space funk, future bass, and Los Angeles beat makers.



Given that this record was produced in a moment of meditation for Lange, Canta Lechuza features a series of techniques to prevent overstimulation brought on by outside influences (listed above). Each track designates a few quiet harmonic elements to provide breathing room before a casual dance rhythm is introduced. Every accentuated crescendo is consistently dampened with an efficient perdendo. The same treatment is given to Lange’s vocals. While Lange’s love letters (or vague text messages given that this is an electronic record) are sung aloud in a crooning fashion, his voice is often matted as sotto voce, made to pose as a chorus or even an owl singing.



Before Canta Lechuza was released, Helado Negro produced a short record entitled Pasajero. The album could have easily been mistaken for being produced in Connecticut, completely consumable by Club Fonograma readers, and absolutely placed on our blog’s virtual wall of destacados. With the utmost grace and bravery, Helado Negro has recycled a delightful short album and remolded it into a record that is simply beyond our time. As the official mark of creative excellence, Carlos Reyes put it best when he simply told me, “Helado Negro is very Avant.”







Video: Helado Negro - "Regresa"


With his terrific second album under the Helado Negro stage name, 2011 is sure to be a fabulous year for Roberto Carlos Lange’s alluring electro-folk project. Included in our latest compilation, Nuevo Ideal, “Regresa” is the first single extracted from the Brooklyn-based artist's adventurous new record, Canta Lechuza (Asthmatic Kitty). Directed by Chicago’s fine photographer Gus Gavino, the video for the song presents a sober white scenario where a pair of youngsters, represented by the figures of dissected foxes with petrified stares, struggle under a common situation of distressing distance; a turmoil that is expressed through a bear and its open jaws. “Regresa acá mi mujer/Ya no puedo más,” Lange croons, while the elegant male protagonist uses his dancing skills and physical expression to seduce his lady, who prefers to evade him by putting a paper napkin on her face. We eventually see the girl having flashbacks of the couple’s happy times in bed, her daily work routine, and also a trippy sequence of hypothetical death with rising souls worthy of an Animal Collective/Panda Bear video.

Video: Helado Negro - “2º Día"


Roberto Carlos Lange (what an awesome name) is one of those prolific artists that for truly unknown reasons (perhaps just our own negligence) had yet to be featured in any corner of this blog. The inclusion of his track “Regresa” in Nuevo Ideal, our latest compilation, is the warmest welcome into a club he clearly belongs to. Born to Ecuadorian parents, the Brooklyn-based artist is a gifted sculptor of multi-media across several platforms. After working under exciting monikers like ROM, Epstein, and Savath & Savalas (his project with Scott Herren), Lange has come to terms with what could be his most heartfelt silhouette as Helado Negro. “2º Día” is a blissful utterance extracted off his new album Canta Lechuza (Asthmatic Kitty Records).

A piano version of "2º Día" had been previously unveiled on Pasajero (2010), a mini album originally meant as a Christmas gift to Lange’s parents. As suggested by the penetrating close-ups in the song’s official video (directed by Santa Maria), Lange feels wonderfully cozy confronting the camera and a room of technology that clearly loves him back. As we process the new album on its entirety, Roberto Lange is already crafting his next project alongside the beautiful Julianna Barwick (whose The Magic Place is still my favorite ‘outsider’ album of the year).

Video: Can Can - "Caos"


Recently, we’ve had a little bit of a crush on a couple of bands coming out of Ecuador. Perhaps it’s our thirst to explore unknown (to us) musical landscapes, but there’s something extraordinarily vigilant about Vírgenes Violadoras, Cadáver Exquisito and Can Can that surges straight from the idiosyncratic. Unlike most of the relatively big scenes in Iberoameirca, Ecuador has yet to stamp a national band into the indie consciousness, and that’s quite refreshing. Our favorite rock albums of the year (Futura Vía, Odio París, Tan Bajo) are pop-induced records dressed in fuzzy noise, so when a band like Can Can delivers a spine-tingling pop song like “Caos” in such a straightforward fashion, we can’t help but to welcome such glossiness with open arms. With directing credits by Juan Carlos Donoso Gómez, the band narrates and scribbles the outcomes of a chaotic gig-in-the-living-room in the band’s very first music video. That crashing of the piñata (along with its time-collapsing music) has to be one of the most memorable sequences in any music video this year; inducing chaos into simplicity.

♫♫♫ "Caos"
Bandcamp

MP3: Vírgenes Violadoras - "Calles de Fuego Azul"


If the band’s name Vírgenes Violadoras isn’t enough to grab your attention, maybe a sexy illustration of a voluptuous nun will. Either way, you’re up for a very good treat, but you already know anything tastes better when there’s sin involved. Virgenes Violadoras is a new name to many of us, but it’s actually one of Ecuador’s most celebrated indie acts. They’re releasing a new album named Lado V later this year and have unveiled a track for free download. The first seconds of “Calles de Fuego Azul” outlined a very steady track, but something that you would expect from a band in the 90s. We found straightforward rock’s simplicity complicated, but if you got it, you got it. They don’t make good principal-rock songs like this anymore. In an age where we’re bombarded with fuzzy & lo-fi rock, the elemental is refreshing.

Download the song for the exchange of an email address at Bandcamp.


MP3: Cadáver Exquisito - “Canción Cuatro”


It’s no secret Club Fonograma is a bit too wedged among the ‘scenes’ of Chile, Mexico and Spain, but trust us, it’s not intentional. I guess we just have better channels (and contacts) in those three very healthy industries. Although we are a ‘Latin Pop’ music blog, we never want to force ourselves to include music from every corner of Iberoamerica; good music is not about representation. But before I go on with more CF dilemmas, let’s get to the reason behind this explanation. If memory doesn’t fail us, this is first time in our blog’s history we post a song from Ecuador.

Cadáver Exquisito is a band we first encountered in one of our call-for-entries of Fonogramaticos, they didn’t make it to the actual compilation but as you can see, they’re quite memorable. “Canción Cuatro” is particularly catchy; it’s a good blend of precise story telling and attractive hooks, unflinching of becoming a teen pop-rock song along the way. In fact, what makes this song so memorable is its shameless acquisition of the pop-rock genre. Definitely for those cool people who can appreciate a good song by Fall Out Boy or Panic at the Disco (“with a sense of poise & rationality”).

Suspension of Disbelief: Video Bizarro #4

“Mi Conejito”, Los Conquistadores del Ecuador (Ecuatorianos, YouTube)

To be honest, I have no clue how to describe this video. This is an actual official video that has been a sensation in several countries in Latin America. Remember when the members of Austin TV used to dress like rabbits? Well, is kinda like that, except that the music here is far from good, but it is also probably not a serious video or is it? We’re not sure, but if the intention of the video was to make us laugh, it has succeeded. Los Conquistadores de Ecuador offer us their all, including an unprecedented choreography that we all should be practicing at clubs. They even describe their music as “techno for all clubs.” Of course, we don’t mean to offend any artistic approach or culture, but this is damn funny. Expect this song to be included in one of the great gatherings of Nacotheque, they probably have it already.