Tijuana Sessions Vol. 3

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ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 63:14

eMusic Review

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Amelia Raitt

eMusic Contributor

Amelia Raitt is a former writer for the television program Mr. Belvedere and has been writing about pop music of all colors and stripes for eMusic since 2005. S...more »

04.22.11
Nortec Collective, Tijuana Sessions Vol. 3
Label: Nacional Records

An orthodontist, chemical engineer and a DJ walk into a bar… Okay, so it sounds like a bad joke, but the origins of the Nortec Collective, a group of musicians and DJs from Tijuana and Ensenada, aren't far from that setup. Their music is best defined as mood rather than sound (which is electronica- and indie rock-tinged): playful, coy, cheerful and profoundly likeable. The first two tracks are fantastic, and you'd be hard-pressed not to be charmed by the rest. Occasionally a record store will play something on its in-store stereo so infectious that no one can resist asking what it is. This is that record.

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Muy Chido!!

kusaiii

Simply love how they mix and blend the music, true artists at work here!

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Fantastic

khaksari

Fun electronica. Try Colorado, Funky Tamazula, and Dandy del Sur.

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Viva Nortec

Swoppy

I tend to listen to a lot of moody introspective glitch and Basic Channel style dub techno, and as much as I love all that modern, serious minded electro-acoustic gloom, every once in a while it's nice to take a break for something more upbeat and unabashedly fun loving. That's where Nortec comes in. Listening to this totally ebullient album is like taking a swan dive off a 3m board into a big, beautiful pool filled with Corona and lemon. If you have a sense of fun and humour, in addition to an eclectic sense of taste, there's no way this album won't put a Rio Grande-wide smile on your face.

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You won't be disappointed...

c.c.rider

I love it! Tengo Lo Voz is the ring on my cell phone.

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Tijuana sessions 1 & 2

Gaia2000

Tijuana sessions 1 I think is even better than this one. By the way, they skipped the no 2 sessions ...

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Smart, Well Done and Fun

AddictionKicks

Just about every one of my friends and/or colleagues I recommend this to come back and tell me how they really liked it A LOT. I've had it for over a year and it is still in my ~hot~ rotation. If you don't want to commit to the whole album try "Tengo La Voz" and "Don Loope". Hey, eMusic, where are Sessions 1 & 2? =)

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outstanding

yiorgos

amazing tunes...track 2 really makes you happy!

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Love it, love it, love it!

RAKman

One of the real advantages of e-music is to sample music you wouldn't normally listen to. This was a real find, well worth the subscription.

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poca madre

lachingona

This album as a whole rules. I keep listening to it because it gets better every time you hear it. Songs like bar infierno y revu rockers grab you like new everytime you hear them.

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Whoops!

d-fib

I mistakenly downloaded this album...eventually I took the time to listen to some of it, and it is positively annoying. Obviously quite a bit of work went into making it and I'm sure it will find its audience, but if you're looking for Latin-inflected electronic music I'd go elsewhere.

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They Say All Media Guide

The third compilation from the loosely organized Nortec Collective (whatever happened to volume two?) offers four years of development from the debut, and that’s apparent in a greater cohesion of sound. Where the debut offering sometimes seemed to graft Mexican elements onto electronica and dance music almost as an afterthought, here everything is more integrated, as with Hiperboreal’s “Dandy del Sur,” where village banda meets spaghetti Western. Sometimes it’s plain goofy, such as with Fussible’s “Tijuana Makes Me Happy,” with its silly English lyric, and sometimes it triggers odd associations — Bostich’s “Tengo la Voz” brings to mind Herb Alpert with its trumpet rather than anything more rooted. It’s notable that this time around, rather than appearing on the major Palm Pictures, it’s on the Mexican-based Nacional label, a good home for this music, which overall succeeds in offering the listener 21st century Tijuana. Not everything is good — Clorofila’s “Almada” seems to get stuck in a monotonous groove, for example — but some are superb. On “Colorado” Fussible seem to channel the spirit of Talking Heads, while “Narcoteque” from Clorofila and Calexico brings Brian Eno to mind. So, like any compilation, it’s a mixed bag. But the unity of spirit brings it all together, and the good far outweighs the mediocre. – Chris Nickson

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