Posts Tagged ‘cumbia’

Label Spotlight: Masstropicas and the new comp “El Sonido de Tupac Amaru”!

Monday, May 9th, 2011

When traveling into the jungle, it’s always a good idea to have a trusted guide, cuz, you know, there’re all sorts of snakes and quicksand and shit. Same goes for traveling into the musical jungle (watch out for those game-killing budget “World Music” CDs!) Our trusted guide in these journeys is the label Masstropicas and their main man Mike P, who’s never led us astray. This week we sat down with Mike P. to talk Peruvian cumbia and their latest–and very limited (500 hand-numbered)–release, El Sonido De Tupac Amaru. Welcome to the jungle!!!!

Tell us about Masstropicas. What inspired you to start the label?

Masstropicas is a collective of sorts not only do I come up with ideas for releases but I also present them to the bands with a collaborative attitude in hopes that they will be receptive. I was inspired to start Masstropicas because no one in North America was releasing Peruvian cumbia and I thought these re-issue’s deserve more than a CD and iTunes.

We reviewed the Ranil’s Jungle Party record, which is fantastic and got a lot of play in the LITA offices (it also made our top reissues of 2010 list). Was that the label’s first release?

No that was actually Masstropicas 4th release, the 3 that came before that were all pressed in very small quantities. Number one being a 45 by LOS CHAPILLACS from Arequipa, Peru. Number 2 being a 12″ from GREEN MANSIONS ( a band between a friend from Denmark and me) and number 3 being a cassette from EL HOMBRE ORQUESTA an amazing street musician from Lima, Peru who performs many cumbia songs and also does some salsa.

Both Ranil’s Jungle Party and El Sonido De Tupac Amaru are prime examples of Peruvian cumbia. Can you talk a bit about this style of music?

Peruvian cumbia much like Peruvian food is a true mix of styles ranging from Asian influence to indigenous Andean influence to American surf rock influence. You’ll find records in Peru that have styles printed next to the song titles, one will say cumbia-rock another will say cumbia-beat and another one will say cumbia-hyuano. It’s always been all over the place but it’s all cumbia Peruana and people outside of Peru who try to pinpoint it always seem to not have the best description.

Tell us about the El Sonido De Tupac Amaru compilation. How did you find these songs/artists?

All of these songs come from my travels in Peru at one point or another. Half of the songs are from 45s I dug down there and songs I heard through a radio station close to my wife’s family’s home called Radio Comas. I would tune in late at night and record radio shows that played cumbia and skim threw the tapes and if I heard something groovy I would ask around and play the song for people in hopes that I could get the name of the group. The compilation is also named after Tupac Amaru which is an avenue also close to where my wife’s family live and you can hear a lot of this music blaring from taxi’s, restaurants, and street vendors there.

Tell us about the re-mastering process. What was the source material that you had to work with? Vinyl? Master tapes? Who did the re-mastering/restoration?

95% of the source material is from vinyl and 5% being from master tapes. Unfortunately only a few labels kept master tapes in Peru and it’s very hard to come across smaller labels who do own master tapes. So we relied on the cleanest copies of the records that I own and trying to mix the sound with the songs on the compilation that come from the master tapes was quite a dilemma for Pepito Perez and Anres Tapia, the two guys who mastered El Sonido De Tupac Amaru along with Ranil’s Jungle Party.

And the packaging looks great! Really cool design and the bonus 7″ makes it even more special. Tell us a bit about the design/packaging.

El Sonido De Tupac Amaru and the Centeno 7″ were both designed by a close friend named Tunchi who is also apart of the street photography collective http://limafotolibre.com. I’ve known him for many years prior to him designing things. It’s truly a collaborative effort with him as well, I trust him very much though, we also work with another photographer names FOKUS who will get us photo’s from old bands and also take newer photos if needed. El Sonido De Tupac Amaru comes with an 11″ x 22″ full color insert with tons of rare photos and along with that it comes with a double sided 11″ x 11″ insert with liner notes and additional art.

Lastly, what are you working on next?

I keep those things under my hat until it’s 100% but we are going to Peru in May to record some bands from the Jungle!

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For audio samples and to order El Sonido De Tupac Amaru (LP + 7″ | Tropic-06) click HERE!

Free Basin’ Fridays – LOS JHARIS DE ÑAÑA!!! (Masstropicas)

Friday, April 27th, 2012

For this week’s Free Basin’ Fridays, we’re hooking up with our friends at Masstropicas to giveaway a copy of this superb (and SUPER LIMTED) slice of Peruvian cumbia: Los Jharis D Ñaña’s Los Creadors Del Sonido De La Carretera Central. Masstropicas have made a name for themselves by digging deep in South America and discovering some of the most mind blowing cumbia ever put to tape. Read this interview we did with them last year here.

So here’s your chance to pick up a copy of their latest release. Limited edition, one-time pressing of 500 copies (with a bonus 7″ single!!) sporting homemade hand stamped labels with an insert featuring liner notes, rare photos and words from Los Jharis’ main man Teo Laura! Read more about the record here but for your chance to win a copy, send us some love in a comment below with your name and email address (kept private) and we’ll pick a winner at random next Friday, 5/4 at 12PM pst!

Free Basin’ Fridays – Deep Afro-Columbian Sound of Myrian Makenwa

Friday, June 15th, 2012

For this week’s Free Basin’ Fridays, we’re heading back to South America with some of our favorite travel guides, the folks at Kindred Spirits! Just out now is a deluxe vinyl reissue of Myrian Makenwa’s La Extraordinaria (Kindred Spirits – KSRE10), an album that stands as one of Colombia’s most significant afro-psychedelia records, perfectly capturing its whole sound system movement subculture of the time.

From the 1970s, people in the Caribbean Coast of Colombia, became captivated by a host of African rhythms such as Afrobeat, High Life and Soukus. Records brought in by merchant sailors from Africa, became the new craze, with local Sound Systems or “Picos”, as they are known in Colombia, becoming the main driving force behind the popularity of African music in the region. Record Labels, seeing an opportunity to capitalize on this new phenomenon, began hiring local bands and creating new lineups to cover and re-adapt these African styles into Spanish.

Discos Machuca, became one of the pioneering record labels to mix local Colombian rhythms, with these new African styles. In his quest to create a record that would capture and embody the whole sound system subculture of the time, Rafael Machuca created the band Myrian Makenwa. The line-up of the band was shrouded in mystery, and in 1981 at the Discos Machuca recording studio in Barranquilla, Rafael Machuca began producing what would arguably become one of the most pulsating and innovative Afro Colombian records ever to be made in Colombia’s Caribbean Coast.

He gave the musicians total creative freedom, allowing them to experiment with new sounds, mixing Afro Caribbean and Latin rhythms, with elements of Afrobeat, Highlife, and Soukus. The result was blistering set of raw hypnotic grooves, a sonic voyage, with songs like “Lady Makenwa” and “Amampondo” completely personifying the new hybrid sound Machuca was searching for.

For your chance to win a copy of this LP, leave a comment below with your name and email address (kept private). Winner will be announced next Friday!

Free Basin’ Friday: Teo Laura Amao’s El Sonido de la Carretera Central | Vinyl LP

Friday, May 10th, 2013

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TGIF! It’s Free Basin’ Friday…time to giveaway some free stuff! This week we’ve got a distro vinyl LP of Teo Laura Amao’s El Sonido de la Carretera Central from the Masstropicas catalog. This album isn’t even in stores yet!! Be the first on your block to own El Sonido de la Carretera Central, featuring 12 essential tracks, spanning from 1973 to 1985, featuring various groups that Teo wrote and arranged songs for. Bands like Los Sanders, Los Blue Kings, Costa Azul, and of course, Los Jharis, with their hard rock and soul-influenced cumbia songs, are mainstays in the neighborhood known as ÑaÑa, as well as various other working class barrios in Lima, and Teo worked with all of them.

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Compiled from various 45, LP and cassette releases, we’re sure this compilation will get you hooked on Teo’s unique guitar slinging and his often imitated but never equaled ‘estilo Carretera’.

In the spirit of this rad cumbia compilation giveaway. This weeks Free Basin’ Friday question is: If you had a cumbia band what would the name be? Please give your answer in the comment box below. Do not forget to included your email address in the box provided, all addresses will be visible to Light In The Attic employees ONLY. Winners will be announced next Friday via Twitter and Facebook.