Mejico Maxico

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 46:41

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
Mexican Institute of Sound, Mejico Maxico
2006 | Label: Nacional Records

Another cross-genre, cross-culture cornucopia from the label that brought you Tijuana Collective and the Pinker Tones. Mexican Institute of Sound is a bit more relaxed than those two acts, favoring bubbling beats, whistling synths and scattered snatches of vocals. "Mirando a las Muchachas" takes a slinky lounge melody and grafts it on top of a sinister throbbing bass. The fat analog synths that elbow through the center of "Jaja Pipi" recall Air, and "Corasound" is all black lights and bleak nights. Mejico Maxico is a dizzying blend of disparate elements that never ceases to thrill and bewilder.

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pleased

dbitter

I was pleased with this album. A lot of people try to make music like this but don't do it well. They do it right.

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A bit of Mexican magic indeed

thelovelydrummer

This album is really enjoyable. A playful, surprising mix of old and contemporary sounds, it's from the "chill out" end of the electronica spectrum, so doesn't force itself on you, rather draws you in. Some tracks might at first seem a bit "easy listening", but then they suddenly head off in a completely unexpected direction. There are some very nice grooves (e.g. "OK!"), some sweet but melancholy atmospheres ("Drume negra"), and some really wacky combinations of musical styles ("Mirando a las Muchachas" and, my favourite, the jump-jazz brass section on "Cybermambo" - just fabulous, but too short!) The best track overall for me is the lovely, delicate "Cancion de Amor Para Mi Futura Novia". Apparently the man behind M.I.S., Camilo Lara, is President of EMI Mexico - it is SO hard to imagine the President of EMI here in the UK having anything like this level of musical sophistication and talent! Not a masterpiece, but 100% worth listening to. Let it weave its spell ...

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slightly comparative

JBau

I like this. It's the freshest I've heard from Mexico in a while, which isn't saying much. (I live in Denver, y'all!) I know Nortec, and am open to other suggestions. Also Spanish punk and rap is of interest as well.

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so so

Rumbero

Mirando Las Muchachas is a very cool catchy toon but the rest is just average laptop stuff. but if you like any of this, go straight to Nortec Collective. they are the masters at this stuff.

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Wickedly refreshing.

bobopuffs

"Mirando.." is so submersive. What a wonderfully random album.

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Latin Groove

nacho

A progressive revival of sweet beats and riffs, a taste of old and new. Represssseeent!!!!!!

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que magnifico

k3vin76

If the afro cuban all stars were 40 years younger, and Mexican, perhaps they would make an album similar to this one. A very good album

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Think Mexico City and you don’t automatically think hipster mecca. In fact you don’t think hipster mecca even if urged — you think hot, crowded, and poverty-pocked. Yet peel the cellophane off Mexican Institute of Sound’s Méjico Máxico and all that changes before you can square the jowly guy in Chuck Taylors on the cover with the space-age pastiche of sound he’s assembled. Camilo Lara, a central figure in the Latin world’s widening electronica circle and MIS’ one-man mastermind, is a little like LCD Soundsystem’s James Murphy: you know the guy’s a genius, but it’s obvious he’s less a performer than a gifted collage artist. Acts like Placebo, Gecko Turner, Babasónicos, and Le Hammond Inferno have enlisted him for remixes, and chances are that, like LCD, he’s bombarded by requests for sound tweaks from distant musical spheres (can it be long before Britney Spears’ reps come calling here, too?). Méjico Máxico, though unlikely to launch him into the popular imagination, at least accounts for why his undergroundsman’s cred is so rock-solid: in a carefully sequenced set of all-Spanish tracks, MIS welds a scrap heap of cumbia, dub, cha-cha, disco, and poetry into a sturdy tower of ultramodern, ultra-listenable music. Record-player hiss rubs up against repeated spoken word assurances (“OK!”), and faded piano plinks dissolve into rhythmic bleeps, whorls, and trance beats. Melancholy morphs into a moody happiness. Dreaminess melts into despair. MIS, presiding with a light touch, sews it all up with a surefootedness that serves his genre well: Mexican electronica is a hard sell, but here are 15 reasons why it shouldn’t be. – Tammy La Gorce

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