Showing posts with label Venezuela. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Venezuela. Show all posts

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Review: Los Amigos Bring the Sexy to Carrboro (2/25)

Although the Cradle wasn't completely sold out, the front of the house was jammed tight with pogo-ing, flagwaving fans by the time I got to Los Amigos Invisibles, about half an hour in to their show. Caught the tail end of this salsa tune on my way in:



A local Venezuelan delegation had brought them a cake that afternoon in honor of the band's twentieth anniversary. All the Amigos were there, except Jose Torres (whom I interviewed for their 2004 Zinga Son record); he had to go home to Spain unexpectedly, so a good pal of DJ Afro's was filling in on bass. Like Los Lobos, another idiosyncratic Latin fusion band, Los Amigos have kept the same close-knit core all these years.

Los Amigos Invisibles 2.25.11

los amigos invisibles

LAI live is like a blender mixing música popular, from the hip to the corny, into a psychedelic milkshake. Before you've fully processed that snippet of an old bolero, they're off to quoting familiar funk hooks, bouncey Europop choruses and organ riffs from sporting events, all swirling in and around their own songs in a non-stop flow.



los amigos invisibles

I got some facetime with DJ Afro after the show, and we talked about vinyl collecting and Venezuelan salsa rarities. He still does a podcast, DJ Afro y su rumba barata, which is broadcast in Caracas, Panama and Mexico City. We agreed that there should be a wiki database for music, similar to the IMDb for movies. Fellow music nerds, any ideas on how to make that happen?

Los Amigos Invisibles 2.25.11

This is my longest clip, a merengue marathon including the song "El Baile del Sobón" from Arepa 3000:

Friday, August 7, 2009

RITMO LATINO Festival in Cary SUNDAY

Free at Cary's Bond Metro Park this Sunday (8/9) from 12 noon-6 pm.

Here's a rundown of events from the festival organizers at Diamante Inc.:

FREE EVENT – UN EVENTO GRATIS

Event Schedule
(Subject to change at any time)

Main Stage – Sertoma Amphitheater

12:45 PM - Welcome
1:00 PM - Brazilian Soul
1:45 PM - Bomba y Plena Cruz dance
2:15 PM - Tambor Vivo
3:00 PM - Venezuelan Dance
3:30 PM - Triangle Salsa All Stars
4:20 PM - Tapatio
5:00 PM - Bravo Norteño

Ritmo Lounge – Kiwanis Shelter

1:00PM - Dancing with music by DJ Mauricio
1:30 PM - Salsa Classes
2:15 PM - Zumba Classes (pending)
3:00 PM - Merengue Classes
3:45 PM - Percussion Workshop W/ Beverly Botsford
4:30 PM - Dancing with music by DJ Mauricio


UPDATE added 8/10:

It was hot as Hades, but still a great place to run into old friends:

lady of spain, men in hats

all stars

cool kids

Frankie

Mauricio's family

Video coming soon...

Monday, May 18, 2009

Rumba Caraqueña

Cool oranges: In my inbox this morning, an email from Venezuelan vibraphonist Alfredo Naranjo with this link to two free song downloads on his ReverbNation player.

Really hip. One of the most exciting artists on the Caracas-based Cacao label (which includes Cuban artists such as Changuito and Horacio "El Negro Hernandez). In 2007 they released Alfredo Naranjo y su Guajeo, featuring trombonist Jimmy Bosch in a guest spot.

In Venezuela, they seem to know how to make modern, intelligent Latin jazz that also swings for the dancer. One way they do it: don't stint on a vocalist. Naranjo's new tracks feature bold choices from the popular music fields of Venezuelan parranda and ska: Francisco Pacheco (of the venerable Un Solo Pueblo) lends his natural baritone to "El Cumaco de San Juan," while rocker Horacio Blanco from Desorden Publico sings "Un Lote de Amor."

I recently came across another excellent, timba-jazz-flavored dance band from Caracas: Cabijazz led by guitarist Alvaro Paiva Bimbo.

Caracas tiene su swing!