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Showing posts with label Spain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spain. Show all posts

Sunday, 12 June 2016

Fatbeat! Powerhouse Jazz / Funk from Madrid.



Fatbeat! are a  Jazz / Alt Rock Funk / (whatever) band based in Madrid, Spain. I saw them play a stunning set in a small bar in Gijon, Spain on Friday night, parts of which left me, and the others there fortuitously assembled, quite breath-taken.

I guess you could call what they do a kind of jazz rock (long instrumentals played with expertise and chops) but the two sets played on Friday night were extremely varied and took in elements not only of Jazz but also Psychedelia, Folk, Funk, Alt Rock and even 20th Century classical music.

Formed in Madrid in 2009, they've released  two fine albums of self-composed material (available here on bandcamp). Their second album "Animals" .is a good solid modern jazz-rock album but sometimes the performances come over as a little too polite for me and it's really in a live setting that the material seems to come to life and breathe fire.

As a live band they really are a serious force to be reckoned with and if you get a chance, you should go see them play. All are very accomplished musicians but Miguel Benito, in particular, is a powerhouse of a drummer who lays down the,solid but frisky grooves the rest of the band - Mario Quiñones on guitar, Andrés Miranda on sax, keyboardist Alberto Morales and bassist Ander Garcia - are free to improvise over. And this is no revival of 70s noodling jazz fusion, the riffs here are catchy and lively and band play soulfully rather than excessively.

I think they are a band who deserve to be much more widely known. Spain has a thriving contemporary music scene and Fatbeat! are one of the best new bands (Spanish or otherwise) I've seen in a long time.

Check them out.

Here's the encore from Friday night's gig at the Cafe Plaza Doze in Gijon, Spain.






Here's a ferocious clip of them in Madrid in 2012. Crank it up.





Band website (in Spanish) http://fatbeatfatbeat.com/
On bandcamp https://fatbeatrecordings.bandcamp.com/




More stranger than known

Asturian Jazz: The Xaime Arias Trio at the Alambique, Gijon, Spain 7/8/2014

Monday, 3 November 2014

Spain's Cosmic Country Rockers - Arizona Baby live in Gijon 1 / 11 / 2014

Arizona Baby - Photo Ricardo Suarez


Arizona Baby are a Spanish band who, believe it or not, do a really impressive line in Cosmic Americana.

Their brand of Gram Parsons / Byrds influenced psychedelic acoustic country rock really works well - especially in a live setting. For a band that only has two acoustic guitars, a drummer and no bass, Javier Vielba (lead vocals and guitar), Rubén Marrón (lead guitar) y Guillermo Aragón (percussion) have a surprisingly full sound and are reminiscent, both in look and style, of an acoustic Byrds circa 1971 .

Check out this video they did for the title track for the 2012 album The Truth.



Their 90 minute set at the Sala Acapulco in Gijon on Saturday night was outstanding. I really enjoyed them. Below are two highlights.

Their new album is called Secret Fires and is available on Subterfuge. Check it out. They have a knack for writing tunes that are both catchy and imbued with a sense of good cheer.









More stranger than known
20 years of the Xixon Sound

Horizonte Eléctrico - 10 Great contemporary Spanish bands...

Horizonte Eléctrico 2 - 10 Flamenco Rock Classics

Los Brincos - Glorious 60s Garage Beat Psych Pop...

Yé-yé! Spanish Nuggets - Ten 1960s Grarage, Beat and Psych classics from Spain. 

Monday, 1 September 2014

Views of Spain - The Art of Arlé Corte

© Arle Corte


Different views of Spain
People tend to have a stereotypical view of Spain - it's always hot and sunny and people spend all their time listening to flamenco and dancing Sevillanas. Nothing could be further from the truth. Spain is actually an astonishingly varied country made up of different regions all with their own languages, dialects, customs and cultures.

And northern Asturias is not like the south of Spain at all. If you go to Asturias expecting the stereotypical Andalucian / Mediterranean culture of bulls, flamenco and sun you will be surprised to find the historical and cultural influences there are Celtic, people drink cider and there is almost as much rain as there is sun. With its history of coal mining, heavy industry and shipbuilding Asturias also has a lot in common with Wales or the north of England.

The landscapes in Asturias are also different to the Spanish stereotype. The wet climate makes it very green and it’s actually one of the most mountainous regions in Europe - people go skiing in the Picos de Europa mountains in the winter.

The changeable weather and light seem to give a sense of movement to the Asturian landscape - the hills, mountains, cliffs, the sea almost have a kind of musicality to them.

Atardecer © Arle Corte


Arlé Corte
One of the Asturian artists who reflects that musicality is Arlé Corte. Although she says she is more interested in the warmer climes and dazzling deserts of Southern Spain, I think it is sill seen through the prism of Arle’s Asturian background.
 
What interests me is the musicality in her work and as you look at these pictures I’m sure you will, as she says, “see the trace of a dance in the movements of the brush”.


Jazz © Arle Corte



Influences and inspiration
In the following text Arlé comments on her work, her influences and what inspires her
(translated from Spanish - original at the bottom of this post).

You can contact or follow Arlé on her facebook page here

"Although I was born in a country with so many variations of green it's difficult to count them all, I really love the ochre, red and orange hues so redolent of deserts and hotter lands. Those are the shades usually found in my work".

"In some way painting is a way of travelling from within to an unknown place".


© Arle Corte


"Like everyone I've had phases and explored variations on different themes: Imaginary deserts, recreations of evocative Pre-Roman Asturian Art, the masculine nude seen from a woman's point of view, the coal mines that were so close to my life as a miner's daughter and grand-daughter... "

© Arle Corte


Guerrero © Arle Corte


Despertar De Xanes © Arle Corte


"In some ways I reinterpret the world and from time to time I go back to being a young girl playing with collages, where everything is possible." 

Collage © Arle Corte


Gijon © Arle Corte


"Inspiration is everywhere, opening my eyes, I don't touch it, I feel it. When that magic moment of creation arrives, "the good accident" as Kandinsky said, in which the canvas itself seems to guide the senses through the brushes, pencils or whatever is to hand, there is always a song in the background. Music forms part of that creative moment, as important as any other tool, guides the hand as well as the body. Yes you can dance and paint at the same time, You can shout in jubilation, or in frustration when you want to cover the whole canvas in black because nothing is working out as you want, just like anything else in life. So a note can escape from the frame like a wink of thanks. Sometimes it's even easy to see the trace of a dance in the movements of the brush."


Ola © Arle Corte


To Itaca © Arle Corte



San Lorenzo © Arle Corte



"Aunque nací en una tierra con tantas variaciones de verde que resulta tarea difícil intentar contarlos, desde hace ya un tiempo tengo verdadera devoción por los ocres, rojizos y anaranjados, esas tonalidades tan identificables con los desiertos y tierras cálidas. Esos son los colores que habitualmente se encuentran en mis trabajos. De alguna manera pintar es una forma de viajar desde dentro hacia un lugar inconcreto.

Como todos he tenido épocas y variaciones sobre diferentes temáticas: Desiertos imaginarios; recreaciones del sugerente Arte Prerrománico Asturiano; el desnudo masculino visto por ojos de mujer; la mina tan cercana a mi vida como hija y nieta de mineros…De alguna manera reinterpreto mi propio mundo y de vez en cuando vuelvo a jugar a ser niña con los collages, donde todo es posible.

La inspiración está alrededor, abriendo los ojos, no se palpa, se siente. Cuando llega ese instante mágico de creación,”the good accident” decía Kandinsky, en la que el propio lienzo parece guiar los sentidos a través de los pinceles, los lápices o lo que pueda tener entre las manos, siempre hay una canción que suena detrás. La música forma parte de ese momento creativo, tan importante como cualquier otro material de trabajo, guía los movimientos de la mano y del propio cuerpo. Si, se puede danzar y pintar. Se puede gritar en el momento de júbilo o en el de frustración cuando quisieras cubrir todo de negro porque nada es como se desea, al igual que en muchos momentos de la vida. Así alguna nota se escapa dentro del cuadro como un guiño de agradecimiento. Incluso, a veces, es fácil ver que en los movimientos del pincel hay el rastro de una danza." 

- Arlé Corte, 2014




More stranger than known
20 years of the Xixon Sound

Asturias > Eight Miles High - Roger McGuinn

Asturian Jazz: The Xaime Arias Trio at the Alambique, Gijon, Spain 7/8/2014

Horizonte Eléctrico - 10 Great contemporary Spanish bands...

The Alambique - Jazz Finds a Home in Northern Spain...





Friday, 8 August 2014

Asturian Jazz: The Xaime Arias Trio at the Alambique, Gijon, Spain 7/8/2014


Here's a heads-up for a great band I saw last night at the Cafe Alambique in Gijon in the north of Spain.

The Xaime Arias Trio (Xaime is pronounced "shymi") are a local latin jazz trio who really deserve some wider recognition. They've been gigging locally here in the northern region of Asturias, Spain for a few years now and have even recorded an album. Xaime Arias plays very melodic keyboards, broad in range and somewhat influenced by the melodies to be heard in traditional Asturian folk music. He takes the Asturian influence and adds some blues and funk to create a very home grown kind of Asturian jazz. He is aided by Oscar Santos:on bass and the excellent Leonel Duarte on drums. 

The numbers tend to build slowly and drummer Duarte builds the tension locking into Arias' solos and creating a very funkified groove. It's loose and free but with Santos' bass keeping the band on course they can really lift off into some quite intense flights of percussive and dance oriented jazz improv. A kind of Latin Jazz power trio.

The 4 year-old clip below doesn't really do the band justice now but it's the only thing I could find by them on Youtube. The band (and we) deserve more. 

Very recommended. 



 




Here are some photos of the gig that I took with my phone.


 











more stranger than known

Asturias > Eight Miles High - Roger McGuinn

Gregory Porter - The Gijon Jazz Festival

The Alambique - Jazz Finds a Home in Northern Spain...

The Cool Sound of Asturian Jazz - Carlos Pizarro


Friday, 1 August 2014

Brenda Holloway / The Night Beats at the Euroyeye Festival, Gijon, Spain 31/7/2014



The 20th Euro Ye-yé festival is taking place in the city of Gijon in the north of Spain this weekend. It's a 4 day festival of 1960s style and music - especially all things Mod, Beat, Garage, Psych and Soul. There are bands, films, all-nighters and even a march of the mods scooter parade through town. It's a week-end long celebration 60s cool.





60s Motown star and Northern Soul favourite Brenda Holloway kicked things off last night with a free concert in the Town Hall Square in the center of Gijon. It was a very short (35 minutes) set that included her old hits "Every Little Bit Hurts", "When I'm Gone", and "You've Made Me So Very Happy". To be honest, the Town Hall Square is not the best place to see any band as the sound is truly awful. The square is surrounded by buildings of concrete and brick on all four sides and the sound just bounces around all over the place and is invariably echoey, shrill and distorted. And every year the local council puts gigs on there. Work that one out. Anyway, despite all that she managed to put in a surprisingly energetic and enthusiastic performance with a local pick-up band as support and her voice, even at the age of 68, is still in fine form with a more overtly gospel influence in evidence nowadays.

A short set but one that left everyone wanting more.





The Night Beats are a Seattle psych garage rock band with two albums already under their belts. Playing at the Sala Acapulco venue - a nice smallish sized gig with usually pretty good sound - the band tore through a powerful 60 minute set that finished around 2 in the morning. Primitive, raunchy and shambolic (in a good way). I thoroughly enjoyed them.










more stranger than known

Horizonte Eléctrico - 10 Great contemporary Spanish bands...

Hugh Hefner's "Playboy After Dark"   

Los Brincos - Glorious 60s Garage Beat Psych Pop...

New Year's Eve 1968 "Surprise Partie" with The Who, Small Faces, Booker T, Pink Floyd, Joe Cocker, Fleetwood Mac... Dawn of the Rock Revolution

Yé-yé! Spanish Nuggets - Ten 1960s Grarage, Beat and Psych classics from Spain. 




Saturday, 12 July 2014

Ye-yé! Spanish Nuggets - Ten 1960s Garage, Beat and Psych classics from Spain.


At the end of July the 20th Euro Ye-yé festival takes place in Gijon in the North of Spain. It's a 3 day festival of 1960s style and music - especially all things Mod, Beat, Garage, Psych and Soul. There are bands (old and new - this year veteran soul singer Brenda Hollaway and new psych garage rockers the Night Beats headline), films, all-nighters and even a march of the mods scooter parade through town. It's a week-end long celebration 60s cool - especially the mod style that has been around for 50 years now and which still shows no sign of loosening its nostalgic grip on pop consciousness.

Ye-yé is actually a French term to describe the French singers and bands influenced by the Beatles in the mid 60s but there was also an awful lot of Ye-yé going on in Spain and the Spanish were actually pretty good at it - which is surprising when you remember that in the 1960s the country had a fascist government with an unfriendly attitude to anything new, young or liberal.

Spain was, as I said in a previous post on one the best Spanish bands of the era, Los Brincos, "a corrupt fascist dictatorship morally propped up by a Catholic church with an obvious antipathy towards the new "liberal" rock / pop culture emerging from the US and the UK. Spain was cut off and the climate was conservative and claustrophobic. Many Spaniards emigrated for reasons that were not just economic (anyone who has seen Spanish director Antonio Mercero's short metaphorical horror film "La Cabina" (The Telephone Box) will have an idea of what the atmosphere in Spain must have been like at the time). Such was this moral rigidity that even the Beatles were not warmly welcomed by the Spanish authorities when they played Madrid in the summer of 1965. Ringo Starr's abiding memory of playing in Spain (in the Beatles Anthology documentary) was of policemen beating up their young fans. However, despite all this, and rather amazingly, Spain actually had a thriving beat group scene in the 60s".

So, bearing in mind that these bands were all working, as John Lennon said, "against overwhelming oddities", let's have a look at ten of the finest examples of that thriving Spanish beat group scene. The bands they called Ye-yé because they sounded like the Beatles singing "Yeah Yeah Yeah". A scene that quietly subverted the conservative claustrophobia of their era and perhaps even offered a glimpse of a brighter future.  
Ye-yé!



Micky Y Los Tonys  - El problema de mis pelos ( = My hair problem) 1966
Micky (Miguel Ángel Carreño), and the Tonys  - Tony de Corral (guitar), Fernando Argenta (guitar), Juan Fuster (bass) and Enrique Moddell (drums) - were a very successful band in Spain in the 60s and even made a couple of films. Like most Spanish beat groups of the era they made a career out of covering UK / US hits translated into Spanish however they soon started writing their own tongue in cheek and wryly ironic material - 'No comprendemos por qué no somos millonarios' (We can't understand why we're not millionaires), 'No sé nadar' (I Can't Swim), 'Cuarto intento de éxito (Fourth Attempt at Success) and this one - 'El problema de mis pelos' (My hair problem).


After nearly a decade of hits the Tonys split in 1970 and Micky went on to have a big MOR solo hit in Spain with 'El chico de la armónica' produced by Fernando Arbex of Los Brincos. After an unsuccessful Eurovision entry in 1977 Micky's career started to decline and by the 1980s he was lost to the Spanish 60s revival circuit. However Micky is still around and in 2010 recorded an album with Jorge Explosión of Spain's best punk garage revival band Doctor Explosión.

Micky Y Los Tonys - Ya No Estas ( = You're not there). From the film "Megatón Ye Yé" (1965)






Los Zooms
A four piece Spanish Dutch collaboration. Otto van der Pol (vocals) and Eric de Leeuwe (drums) teamed up with Alex Sánchez (guitar) and Eduardo Amorós (bass) to record two of the best Spanish garage / psych singles of the era. A promising band that unfortunately met with no commercial success. They split up after only a few months together leaving behind these two classic singles.

Los Zooms - Algo Mas ( = Something more) 1968.



Los Zooms - Alguien Los Ha De Escucuchar ( = Someone must hear them) 1967





 
Los Archiduques - "Lamento de Gaitas" (= Bagpipe Lament / I love how you love me) 1967
Cover versions were standard practice at this time in Spanish rock. However this one is more original than most. A version of the Paul and Barry Ryan song by an Asturian band complete with Asturian bagpipes. The words were also rewritten and the song was changed to a lament for a dead girlfriend which I'm not sure really goes with the happy smiley tune but anyway...

Los Archiduques - Tino Casal (vocals),  Armando Pelayo (organ), Pedro Bastarrica (drums), Tony and Claudio (guitars) and Tito (bass) were all actually from Asturias in the north of Spain and, although this was not a hit, it may be the first time that bagpipes were used in a rock song. The shimmering fuzz tone guitar solo also adds to the rather tasty psychedelic stew the band manage to cook up. Psychedelic "fabada" anyone?

After the band split in 1971 lead singer Tino Casal emigrated to London and later reinvented himself, David Bowie style, as a kind of Spanish glam rock / new romantic icon for the 80s. He became part of the 80s Madrid "movida" scene, which also included film director Pedro Almodovar, and became one of the most successful Spanish solo artists of the 80s. Another Barry Ryan song, Eloise, gave him a national number one in 1988. He died in a car accident in 1991.






Los Brincos - Nadie Te Quiere Ya ( = Nobody wants you now) 1968
I've written more fully about Los Brincos here. They were the best and the most successful of the bands to come out of Spain at this time and were even known as the Spanish "Beatles". They maintained a consistent run of high quality hits throughout their six years together.  Nadie Te Quiere Ya is a psych classic taken from the 1968 album Contrabando recorded in London at Abbey Road in 1968 with Troggs' producer Larry Page at the controls.






Los Salvajes - Es La Edad ( = It's the age or It's an age thing) 1966
From Barcelona Los Salvajes (The Savages) were Gaby Alegret (vocals), Andy González (guitar), Julián Moreno (guitar), Sebastián Sospedra (bass) and Delfín Fernández (drums). If Los Brincos were the Spanish "Beatles" then los Salvajes were the Spanish "Rolling Stones" and had a much tougher sound. Es La Edad is a generational long hair anthem - its sentiments echoing the Who's My Generation.







Los Ángeles - Momentos 1969
Los Momentos - Poncho González (vocals, drums), Carlos Alvárez (guitar, vocals), Agustín Rodríguez (guitar, vocals) y Paco Quero (bass) - were one of the most successful bands in Spain in the late 60s. Momentos was a top ten hit in 1969 and shows a distinct mid 60s Beatles influence.







Los Íberos - Fantastic Girl 1970
Los Íberos - Enrique Lozano (Vocals), Adolfo Rodríguez (guitar), Diego Cascado (drums) and Cristóbal de Haro (bass) - were the first Spanish band to record an entire album in London. They were extremely popular in Spain and starred in a couple of films. The clip below is taken from "Topical Spanish" (1970), directed by Ramon Masats, and seems to bear a strong "Help" influence.







Los Bravos - Black is Black 1966
The one that made it. Black is Black was an enormous international success in 1966 reaching number 2 in the UK charts and number 4 in the US. It was actually the result of a certain amount of international co-operation as the song was written by three Brits (Tony Hayes, Michelle Grainger, and Steve Wadey), the band's manager, Alain Milhaud,  was French, the lead singer, Mike Kennedy, was from Germany and only the band - Antonio Martinez (guitar), Manuel Fernández (organ), Miguel Vicens Danus (bass) and Pablo Gomez (drums) were actually Spanish.

Quite a bit of the credit for Black is Black should go to manager Alain Milhaud who, after the band had already achieved success in Spain, aspired to even greater things in Europe and the US. The band's Spanish label Columbia were unconvinced but he struck a deal with UK Decca to record some sessions in London with a view to a possible UK release. Black is Black was chosen by arranger Ivor Raymonde and at first the band were underwhelmed by the song. Its hit potential was obvious though - the arrangement, especially the bass line, is very Motown inspired and Kennedy's vocals bear more than a passing resemblance to Gene Pitney. The band however did not play on the recording and what you actually hear are some of London's finest session musicians. The song was released in the UK on Decca in the summer of 1966 and picked up by Pirate station Radio Caroline who turned it into a hit. Unfortunately the band couldn't follow it up and, although they continued to have massive success in Spain, to the rest of the world Los Bravos remain one-hit-wonders.

Semi-interesting footnote: In 1970, after Mike Kennedy left the group, the band recruited a British singer, Andy Anderson, and recorded a single Individuality. Andy was the brother of Jon Anderson who was about to achieve mega-success with prog-rockers Yes.




Note; I've attempted to be accurate with the band line-ups but one of the many problems Spanish bands had at this time was the call-up. Military service was compulsory in Spain right up to the 80s and quite a few of these bands had members temporarily sacrificed to what in Spain was known as "La Mili"

Most of the band information here was sourced from the excellent Spanish online rock encyclopedia la fonoteca http://lafonoteca.net/ (in Spanish)

There seem to be very few decently written histories of this period in Spanish rock. Not even Los Brincos - one of the most important bands of the period - have a biography written about them. Compared to the US and UK where rock has become a nostalgia industry the Spanish seem quite uninterested in their recent past. An explanation for this apparent indifference could be, as I mentioned in my post on Los Brincos, "that for many Spaniards "the swinging 60s" did not exist. There was censorship and no freedom of speech. Any form of protest could get you locked up, beaten up or even killed. Spain would have to wait until the late 70s and the death of Franco to regain democracy. So, the Spanish tend not to look back nostalgically on the 60s as a golden era of change and musical / artistic development because, for them, it wasn't".

However, as I said in my introduction, in their own subtle way perhaps these bands offered a glimpse of a future where change was indeed possible.
For that they deserve respect.



more stranger than known
Los Brincos - Glorious 60s Garage Beat Psych Pop...

20 years of the Xixon Sound

Horizonte Eléctrico - 10 Great contemporary Spanish bands that should be better known outside Spain

Horizonte Eléctrico 2 - 10 Flamenco Rock Classics



Sunday, 17 November 2013

The Cool Sound of Asturian Jazz - Carlos Pizarro's ethereal jazz piece "Nana pa Mama"


Gijon is a perky little city in Asturias on the northern coast of Spain. It holds a jazz festival every year and has quite a busy jazz scene based around a bar I've written about previously called the Cafe Alambique

Carlos Pizarro Quartet.NOV.2013_14
Carlos Pizarro  © Alejandro Nafría

For me one of the highlights of the festival this year was this gorgeous piece by local guitarist Carlos Pizarro and his quartet. This live version of their own Nana pa Mama seems to have a spacey ethereal atmosphere which is somewhat reminiscent of Miles Davis' In A Silent Way. It is brilliant to chill-out to after a stressing day at work. I love it and I've been listening to it all week. Like Miles' best work, it seems to transcend jazz and is just good music  -  whatever you want to call it.

Take a listen.




You could put that on after In A Silent Way just to maintain the mood couldn't you? The band are Carlos Pizarro - guitar, Javier Rubio - Sax, Horacio Garcia - Bass and Felix Morales - Drums.

As I said, the above version of Nana pa Mama was recorded at the Jazz Festival but you can find the original on the quartet's new CD La voz del árbol (The Voice of the Tree). For me the album version doesn't have the same tension and therefore isn't quite as hypnotic however the album is of a consistently high quality and really shows off some the excellent original jazz on offer here in Asturias.

Carlos has put some of the album on soundcloud and here is the album's opening track Hasta Tu Ombligo Y Volver (To your navel and back).




Quite folk influenced, the above track seems to me to have a kind of late 60s Pentangle feel about it at times. The album has a kind of autumnal melancholy and some of the tracks are based around ideas of age and growing old. All band members contributed there own compositions and it is definitely worth checking out the other tracks on Soundcloud. Support the musicians and buy it if you like it of course.

Nieve (Snow)



I've written before about some of the great jazz being played in Gijon here and I've seen Carlos Pizarro play at the Cafe Alambique on a number of occasions now with a variety of line-ups. His playing is always considered and displays a precise and soulful economy. He's one of the most interesting musicians on the Asturian scene at the moment. Check out his website (in Spanish) here http://www.carlospizarro.es/ for more.

Meanwhile, replay Nana pa Mama and just chill...



Carlos Pizarro - "Que la música no muera y el arte nos salve."




More on stranger than known
The Alambique - Jazz Finds a Home in Northern Spain

20 years of the Xixon Sound 

Gregory Porter - The Gijon Jazz Festival 

Medeski Martin and Wood - Gijon Jazz Festival 

Asturias > Eight Miles High - Roger McGuinn 





Wednesday, 4 September 2013

Los Brincos - Glorious 60s Garage Beat Psych Pop In Excelsis



I’ve always had a love for mid 60s summertime pop / rock: The Beach Boys, The Lovin’ Spoonful, The Mama and Papas, The Turtles…. The harmonies and the Rickenbacker guitars seem to evoke the warmth, sunshine and good vibes which, if you were brought up in the rainswept UK, could  occasionally be somewhat lacking.

When I first came across Spanish band Los Brincos (The Jumps or The Skips) I heard the same bright harmonies and perfect pop craftsmanship that can be heard in any of the bands mentioned above. For me Los Brincos deserve a place in the great 60s pop pantheon and should be more widely known outside Spain.


Los Brincos - "Nobody wants you now". (1968).




In the 1960s Spain was a corrupt fascist dictatorship morally propped up by a Catholic church with an obvious antipathy towards the new "liberal" rock / pop culture emerging from the US and the UK. Spain was cut off and the climate was conservative and claustrophobic. Many Spaniards emigrated for reasons that were not just economic (anyone who has seen Spanish director Antonio Mercero's short metaphorical horror film "La Cabina" (The Telephone Box) will have an idea of what the atmosphere in Spain must have been like at the time). Such was this moral rigidity that even the Beatles were not  warmly welcomed by the Spanish authorities when they played Madrid in the summer of 1965. Ringo Starr's abiding memory of playing in Spain (in the Beatles Anthology documentary) was of policemen beating up their young fans. However, despite all this, and rather amazingly, Spain actually had a thriving beat group scene in the 60s.

Outside of Spain the best-known Spanish band was probably Los Bravos who had a one-off international hit with Black is Black in 1966. However, Los Brincos, who were known in Spain as the “Spanish Beatles” (they even had their own version of Beatlemania called Brincosis) were probably the most successful Spanish band of the decade. Over the 6 years they recorded (1964 – 1970) they had string of hits and  left behind a body of work which, although varied, and, on occasion, a little too saccharine coated for me, is very much worthy of investigation and does contain some rather glorious 60s powerpop highlights.

The group, formed in 1964, were Fernando Arbex (drums), Manuel González (bass), Juan Pardo (guitar) and Antonio ‘Junior’ Morales (guitar). Their first album (and their best), Los Brincos  comes over as a kind of 60s garage rock classic. It mixes influences as varied as R’n’B, Doo-wop, The Beach Boys, The Beatles, Surf and even proto punk and around half the songs are sung in English. One or two sound like they would even fit well in a Tarantino movie.


Flamenco (1964) was their first hit in Spain. Like the great 60s UK bands they took something essentially American and merged it with their local culture to create something fresh.



The band continued to have a whole series of self-penned hits which lasted all the way through until the end of the decade - "Flamenco" (1965), "Sola" (1965), "Tú me dijiste adiós" (You said goodbye - 1965). "Mejor" (Better - 1966) and “Nadie te quiere ya” (Nobody wants you now - 1968) are some of the best known and still get a lot of airplay in Spain.

The band's second LP Brincos II came out in 1966. However it displayed a band that seemed to have developed a kind of split personality with jangling Beatlesque rockers alongside rather syrupy string-laden ballads.

Sola (1965).

 



Mejor ("Better" - 1966). From Brincos II





In late 1966 Juan Pardo and Junior Morales left the group and went off to have a career as middle of the road ballad-singing duo Juan and Junior. This seemed to resolve the musical division in the band and Fernando Arbex and Manuel González recruited Vicente Ramírez and Miguel Morales and went in search of a wider rock audience. In 1968 they even went to London to record their third album “Contrabando” at Abbey Road with engineer Geoff Emerick and Larry Page of Troggs fame as producer. The results were varied but it does contain the psych punk classic Nadie Te Quiere Ya ("Nobody wants you now" - see above) and the very Who influenced The Train which overtly pinched the riff from Substitute. Apparently Pete Townshend was not best pleased when he heard their appropriation of his riff and sued. Nowadays though Pete seems to have become a little more easy-going about these things


The Train (1968).



The last album, “Mundo, Demonio y Carne” (1970)  was recorded in both English and Spanish and saw them heading off into prog-rock territory. It was a strange mix of latin inspired rock and straight pop. A kind of cross between Santana and the Moody Blues. With the exception of "Carmen" most of it didn't sound like the old Brincos at all and the 7 minute raga rock guitar instrumental Kama Sutra was a strange way to round off an album and career (see below). The band evidently had great designs for the album but it failed to make much headway in a Spain whose government and media were now openly hostile to hippies and the new rock culture. The band broke up shortly after. The other members all had successful solo careers in Spain and Fernando Arbex went on to form the funk rock band Barrabás and also produced albums by José Feliciano, Harry Belafonte, Nana Mouskouri amongst others.


If I were you (1969)



In 2000 Fernando Arbex and Manuel González reformed and even put out an album, Eterna juventud (Eternal Youth), but Fernando Arbex, pretty much the leader, composer and “soul” of the band died in 2003 which ruled out any further reunions.

With their catchy good day sunshine feel + evident sense of humour (eg Borracho - a song about a clumsy drunk) they come over more like a kind of Spanish Lovin' Spoonful than the Beatles.  However, like the fabs, their music manages to conjure up a more innocent and optimistic era. Which is not bad when you consider that for many Spaniards "the swinging 60s" completely passed them by. Many rock records, films and books were censored or banned and there was no freedom of speech or official opposition to the government. Any form of protest could get you locked up, beaten up or even killed. Spain would have to wait until the late 70s and the death of Franco to regain democracy. So, the Spanish tend not to look back nostalgically on the 60s as a golden era of change and musical / artistic development because, for them, it wasn't.

This seems to make Los Brincos' achievement all the greater. Despite having to work in a very conservative culture that had deliberately been isolated from the rest of Europe, the band were able to maintain some degree of independence and artistic control and produce some classic 60s pop.. Moreover the band showed a willingness to dispense with musical formulas and keep moving forward. They had an enormous influence on Spanish rock and pop and are responsible for some great catchy 3 minute singles, the best of which, in my opinion anyway, deserve a place alongside anything the UK beat / RnB scene came up with. A classic band.


Discography
    Los Brincos (1964)
    Brincos II (1966)
    Contrabando (1968)
    Mundo, Demonio y Carne (1970).
    World, Evil & Body (1970) — English version of Mundo, Demonio y Carne
    Eterna juventud (2000) — Reunion album.






Side 2 (Bonus tracks)


Shag it (1964). Tongue in cheek?  I hope so. Anyway, how on earth did they get this past the censor? This is 1964. Can you even imagine this on the BBC in 1964? Great punchy performance on this track from their 1st album complete with Lennonesque lead vocal and Beatle style "Ooohs" on the backing vocals. Are they singing "Shag on by"? Is this Punk Rock? All very odd...





Tú me dijiste adiós. (1966 - You told me goodbye). The "Spanish Beatles". Comparisons with the fab four are not altogether wide of the mark here but in 1966 who wasn't influenced by the Beatles?





Tu en mi. (1966 - You in me). They've heard the Kinks and the Who and they like what they hear. They take the Can't Explain riff off into another direction and that's OK.






Kama-Sutra (1970). The last track on their last album Mundo, Demonio y Carne. The band ride off into a raga-rock psychedelic sunset...






More Spanish rock on stranger than known

20 years of the Xixon Sound

The Return of the Manta Ray

Horizonte Eléctrico 2 - 10 Flamenco Rock Classics

Horizonte Eléctrico - 10 Great contemporary Spanish bands that should be better know outside Spain






Sunday, 28 July 2013

The Alambique - Jazz Finds a Home in Northern Spain




Gijon is a perky little city on the northern coast of Spain in the Principality of Asturias. It's a city with a lot of pride, history and a very strong sense of its own identity. Read my post 20 Years of Xixon Sound for a more detailed description of the city and its place in the history of Spanish rock.

For jazz fans in Gijon, Thursday night is jazz night in the Cafe Alambique. It's not famous. It has no great history and you can probably only fit around 40 or 50 people into it at any one time (though there is a terrace outside) but it is a great place to see bands. Especially jazz bands. You can enjoy a beer standing right next to the drummer or position yourself right opposite the sax player. So it’s very face to face and the acoustics are brilliant. I particularly love the sound of the acoustic double bass. It has a really sensual quality that comes over live but never seems to record well. In the Alambique it sounds really funky. However if you prefer you can just prop up the bar or sit at one of the tables (if there is room) and still only be feet away from the band.

For me this is the way to listen to jazz. It really is a live music. It exists in and for a moment. The musicians create, develop and explore ideas and need to listen and respond to each other in an instant. CDs and vinyl LPs may record the performances but the way to really experience jazz is to have it happening live right in front of you and to see and feel how the music is created from moment to moment. For me, that’s the thrill. To see it fly when it could quite easily fall apart and crash.

And the jazz flies at the Alambique on Thursday nights. There have been occasional excursions into blues, rock and soul but what has really surprised me over the last year or so has been the exceptional quality of the jazz on offer.

For example, this last Thursday I saw a stunning set by the Cesar Latorre trio which was so extraordinary it pretty much inspired me to write this post. The week before there was a really impressive set by the Adrian Carrio Quintet. Before that we had an excellent night with the Jacobo de Miguel trio. A month ago French guitarist Wilfried Wilde's trio played... I could go on, the quality of groups and performances is so consistently high.

So this post is an homage to the Alambique and some of the fine music I have seen there. If you live in Gijon, or are just passing through on a Thursday, go and check out what's on at the Alambique this week. Entrance is free and for the price of a beer or two you can see and listen to some pretty fine music. Their facebook page is regularly updated with what's on or coming up and is here http://www.facebook.com/cafealambique

None of the clips below were filmed in the Alambique. The bands were chosen quite randomly because they have all played there in the last month or so. All the musicians featured here are from Asturias. I think you'll agree there's a lot of good jazz here.

Jazz has found a home in Asturias.












Cesar Latorre is from Gijon but is now based in Amsterdam. He has released one CD called Fastforward of a Day". His playing is inventive, occasionally slightly berserk and full of imagination. The two sets played last Thursday night showed breathtaking virtuosity and an entertaining playfulness which was, for me anyway, occasionally reminiscent of Thelonius Monk. Check out the video below and his website here http://www.cesarlatorre.com

















Adrián Carrio is from Oviedo so is another local lad. He has toured the UK, Europe, Japan and the USA in the last six or seven years. I was quite impressed by the horn section at this gig and the band really swung. Lot of soul.
Check the clip below and his page here http://adriancarrio.es/

The line-up on the clip below is Javier Rubio: alto sax
, Eladio Díaz: tenor sax, 
Adrian Carrio: Piano, 
David Casillas: double bass and 
Felix Morales: drums.


















Jacobo de Miguel is another Asturian musician. I've seen him a couple of times at the Alambique now. Another excellent keyboard player with a strong melodic sense.

The 15 minute clip below, although not recorded at the Alambique, gives you an idea of the variety, skill and quality of music on offer most Thursday nights.









More
Asturias > Eight Miles High - Roger McGuinn

20 years of Xixon Sound

"Cool" - BBC Arena documentary

The Horace Silver Quintet - "Song for My Father" on Danish TV 1968

What is Bebop? - The Subject is Jazz





Tuesday, 28 May 2013

Sidonie and the feelgoodometer


Sidonie live at the Casino, Gijon, 25th May 2013

There are some bands that will bring a smile to your face. The Beatles, The Small Faces, The Lovin' Spoonful, Madness, The Who, The Grateful Dead... all of them had a sense of humour and gave off strong feelgood vibes. The Beatles had a cheeky and absurdist wit, as seen in the films Hard Day's Night and Help; the The Who were subject to the uncontrollable farce of Moon the Loon; the Small Faces were imbued with a keen knockabout cockney comedy and featured it most strongly in Lazy Sunday; and the Dead took cues from Ken Kesey's Merry Pranksters. It all adds up to setting your feelgoodometer spinning and good vibes a-flowing. Maybe the humour and positive vibes are part of their greatness. If the Beatles are anything to go by it is perhaps evidence of greater artistic self-confidence and a longer-lasting more genuine "cool" than the pale-faced, leather-trousered art school attempts at such. The feelgood positivity is an essential part of their art.

Sidonie are a Spanish band who are also imbued with this sense of existential anti-angst. I saw them play live on Saturday night in Gijon. Sidonie are Marc Ros (vocals, guitar), Jesús Senra (vocals, bass, sitar) y Axel Pi (drums, tablas, bongos). They owe their existence to a record shop in Leeds where the 3 members met in 1997. Axel Pi and Marc Ros were on holiday in the UK and were looking for a specific song by Brigitte Bardot. They went into a local Leeds shop and behind the counter was Jesús Senra. To memorialise this moment of heavy synchronicity the band named themselves after the Bardot song they were looking for – Sidonie.

They have made around half a dozen albums and are band with evident 60s pop and rock influences. You get occasional flashes of the Kinks or the Small Faces in their sound, not necessarily in specific songs but in the general ambiance. I have mentioned them before here. Their last album A Mil Anos Luz is recommended for its riffy psychedelic rock. They also have a knack of writing catchy songs and there was much singalong at the gig on Saturday night. The band don't appear to take themselves too seriously and they have a cheeky feelgood factor in their stage presence, somewhat reminiscent of the Lovin' Spoonful, which is refreshing. Rock music seems to have spent so much of the last 20 years trying so hard to be post modern and self referential that it now appears to be disappearing up its own output socket. Sidonie are definitely an antidote to that.

Plus any band that comes on stage with a sitar gets my vote.

The gig had some notable highlights. I’ve included some clips from youtube below. The show built from a slow unplugged start with Jesús Senra singing solo, featured a few intense electric versions on some of their hits like El Bosque and A Mil Años Luz, and even featured the aforementioned the sitar on the instrumental “Sidonie Goes To London”. The band ended the show by coming out into the middle of the audience and doing a couple of acoustic numbers (one of which was the Everly BrothersAll I Have To Do Is Dream) with everyone sat around them on the floor. A nice chummy way to finish with big grins all round and everyone getting their Smartphones out to memorialize the moment.

There was spontaneity and warmth and the band achieved a genuine rapport with the audience. Good vibes and positivity. My feelgoodometer recorded a natural high.



El Bosque (The Wood)




A Mil Años Luz (A Thousand Light Years Away)




Encore



Sidonie band website here (Spanish)


Now try this Horizonte Eléctrico - 10 Great contemporary Spanish bands that should be better known outside Spain