Showing posts with label linda mirada. Show all posts
Showing posts with label linda mirada. Show all posts

Linda Mirada - Con Mi Tiempo Y El Progreso

Con Mi Tiempo Y El Progreso, Linda Mirada
Lovemonk, Spain
Rating: 86
by Blanca Méndez

Listening to Linda Mirada is like traveling back in time and hanging out with Fleetwood Mac and Mecano, which is enough of a selling point without saying that Con Mi Tiempo Y El Progreso is a beautifully executed pop album that doesn’t try to be anything that it’s not. Though certainly more youthful than the other two, Con Mi Tiempo Y El Progreso would be perfectly comfortable in your record collection between Tango in the Night and Entre el cielo y el suelo. It’s like a time capsule of the late ‘80s, an anachronism that somehow makes sense in 2012, though there’s really nothing new about it.

The album wastes no time on introductions or small talk, immediately drawing the listener in with the charming ode to the beach that is “La Costa.” The airy, echoey vocals, like a siren’s call floating over ocean waves, are soothing and seductive, almost hypnotic. By the end of the song Linda Mirada has you in the palm of her hand. Then she shoves you right into full-on ‘80s mode with “Mientras La Música No Pare.” The videogamey, bordering on cheesy, percussion paired with the swelling saxophone makes no effort at subtlety, and the increasingly precise and pronounced enunciation and the sax trills at the end really drive home the point: Linda Mirada is not fucking around.

Still one of the best songs of the year, “Secundario” features a springy melody and spacey synths that make it feel distant in a really attractive way, as if the space between the song and the listener adds to the appeal. There’s also something comfortably, almost routinely dark about this album that is not entirely revealed in its first single. It’s in the way “Las Cosas Nunca Salen Como Las Planeas” seems resigned before it even begins or how “Lío En Río,” with its strategically monotonous guitar and bursts of something that sounds halfway between a shriek and a cackle, talks about how summer days are the longest in a way that wishes summer would never end and at the same time is already bored. In “Aire” there are so many cacophonous elements—eerie vocals, ominous percussion, spirited strings, playful bass, a nimble flute—that it shouldn’t make sense together. Yet, it is one of the album’s most captivating tracks.

Con Mi Tiempo Y El Progreso’s brilliance lies in its convictions. The commitment to a sound that to many will register as outdated and unfashionable is the kind of commitment it takes to rock a garish, older-than-you sweater that has been collecting dust at a thrift store. Whereas someone like Javiera Mena takes a fondness for the ‘80s and makes it into something new, for Linda Mirada there’s no pretense of updating a sound or putting a fresh spin on it. Con Mi Tiempo Y El Progreso is unabashedly ‘80s, unapologetically Tango in the Night-era Fleetwood Mac. And there’s a lot to admire in someone who sticks to her guns like that. It makes the album title particularly apt. El progreso is a larger sense of change over time, but mi tiempo is more of an individual measurement, one that’s not calibrated to any one clock or calendar but moves at the pace of whoever is keeping time. Linda Mirada’s tiempo is the ‘80s, which is why it would be a mistake to call this album nostalgic. You can’t long for an era if you’re still living in it.

Linda Mirada - "Secundario"


While Linda Mirada’s debut album, China es otra cultura, ultimately didn’t transcend into something bigger, it adequately worked as a pleasing collection of harmless '80s pop revivalist tunes with clear influences, unfolding a glamorous new revelation to watch. Following the release of last year’s superb 12”, Fabuloso San José, Ana Naranjo returns with her chic brand new single off her yet untitled sophomore record (and first with Discoteca Océano), “Secundario.” Now, I might be kind of obsessed lately with Nicolas Winding Refn’s astounding Drive, but I can definitely imagine this track included in the film’s soundtrack. It’s not synth-charged as anything included in it, but Linda Mirada’s stylish confection is as striking as that eye-catching magenta vintage typography of the movie’s initial credits—it simply clicks. Kudos to the “All My Friends”-like piano base and New Order-esque guitar work, as both splendidly combine with Naranjo’s gorgeous vocals. Instantly catchy, for sure.


Stream: Linda Mirada - Fabuloso San José



As previously announced with that glorious 3D Crazy-Ball platform video for “Solo,” Discoteca Oceano (in collaboration with Lovemonk) extracted a few tracks off Linda Mirada’s debut album China Es Otra Cultura (Independiente, 2009) as Ana Naranjo’s first reference with the label. Fabuloso San José is a gorgeous 12’’ four-piece maxi-single that should provide Linda Mirada with plenty of momentum before she drops her new album early next year (to be recorded in San Francisco this summer). The album consists of four pop gems that have been given the remix treatment by some truly elegant, world-renowned acts.

Fabuloso San José opens with a funky on-the-floor remix for “Solo” by the you-didn’t-know-she-was-Latina Ramona Gonzales, better known as Nite Jewel. It follows with synth pop dynamite rendition of “Tokyo” by California’s Part Time, while Ruby Suns exploits the Spanish boogie out of “Hermosilla.” We once referred to Linda Mirada as “the lost little lamb in Spain’s indie," we’re glad to see her fate shifting into a smart and ambitious career. Stream the maxi-single in its entirety, and grab one of the tracks via Altered Zones.



Linda Mirada - "Solo" (Sabore Bicoro Remix)


Linda Mirada's China Es Otra Cultura seemed like a little lost lamb when it first came out; so much pop and stylized grim eventually earned her the status of a revelation. As announced last year, this beautiful singer from Madrid has signed to Discoteca Oceano (former home of El Guincho & Joe Crepusculo). In anticipation for her sophomore record, and as a way to officially welcome her, they'll be releasing a 4-piece 12'' titled Fabuloso San José, featuring remixes from her impressive debut. This first mix comes from Barcelona-based act Sabore Bicoro and it comes with a flashy and astrological clip. There's plenty of movement and Crazy-Ball 3D transitions to tag this video as a memorable one.

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.

China Es Otra Cultura, Linda Mirada

CHINA ES OTRA CULTURA,
LINDA MIRADA

Independiente, Spain
Rating: 72
By Jean-Stephane Beriot

For a girl who loves the 80s and its oh-so-glamorous (and sometimes erratic) pop, China es Otra Cultura is a nice recollection of the sounds of such decade with a bit of a twist. Linda Mirada is one of those gorgeous projects that don’t necessarily need a defining sound to work; in fact, her influences overtake most of the album but in a very safe and forgiving way. This nine-piece debut isn’t trying to make statements or contribute to music; it rather offers a good number of songs for selective dance rooms.

Musically, China es Otra Cultura isn’t very original but it sure knows how to showcase its lustrous personality. You know, it’s like the girl who sees pop culture and makes outfits out of it, taking trends from a bunch of places and wears them as her own, because she has the talent to do so. Linda Mirada is very much like a Gary Low meets Kate Nash, a balanced modern girl with plenty of stories to gossip through music. “San Valentin” has already established itself as one of Spain’s indie hits of the year. It’s very Italian and very American, but at the same time, anyone (within our niche) would recognize its Spanish charm and somewhat humorous lyricism.

She’s no hit wonder; in fact, you could shuffle the album and make singles out of every song here. Talking about singles, “Jose” would make an amazing single as I feel it’s the song were she best displays her artistry, and because the tune is fucking addictive: “Yo no sé que le pasa a José, que las 24 horas solo piensa en bailar.” The opener “Tokyo” plays as a big celebration, it’s the album’s best song too. The album is however flawed by a number of songs that although catchy, can’t overpass its oldie approach and fail to translate themselves into present times. Linda Mirada is a beautiful excess of bubble-gum pop, and a great distraction if you’re looking for one.


♫♫♫ "Tokyo"
MySpace

Video: "San Valentin", Linda Mirada

Linda Mirada is pop on high heels and her first video "San Valentin" captures the funky, shiny and kind of weird glamorous night-life some people can live with. The song is catchy as hell and is kind of a minor summer hit in Spain. Despite the low-budget video this actually works. It's full of strange sweaty characters trying to hook up with somebody, talk about harmless pop!