La Marcha Del Golazo Solitario

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La Marcha Del Golazo Solitario album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 56:22

eMusic Features

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Zizek and Digital Cumbia

By Richard Gehr, eMusic Contributor

Every Thursday night at the Voodoo Motel in Buenos Aires's styling Palermo neighborhood, resident DJs Villa Diamante, Nim and El G throw a weekly party known as Zizek. Named after the insanely brilliant, or perhaps just brilliantly insane, Slovenian philosopher-psychoanalyst Slavoj Zizek (the connection has something to do with his marriage to an Argentine model), their weekly fiesta focuses on the cutting edge of digital cumbia along with other tropical and urban delights. Launched in… more »

They Say All Music Guide

After the one-two punch of Rey Azucar and Fabulosos Calaveras, it seemed there was no place to go for the Fabulosos Cadillacs but heavier and louder. Instead, the band did a sharp 180-degree turn with the rather peculiar La Marcha del Golazo Solitario. The thrash metal guitars and wild tempo changes have been abandoned for a jazzy, Brazilian feel. “C.J.” is a straight bossa nova track, reminiscent of Antonio Carlos Jobim, while “Los Condenaditos” marries samba beats to bluesy slide guitar and a wall of horns. There’s even an instrumental Latin-jazz number, “57 Almas,” played entirely on piano, upright bass, and congas. Only “Roble,” “Pirana,” and “Necessito Una Nariz de Payaso, No Me Prestas La Tuya…?” continue in the Latin rock mode from their previous two albums, and these songs are not as aggressive as their previous rock tracks. Lyrically, the band has toned down the quirky humor as well, preferring to write songs that are more reflective and philosophical, although there is still plenty of smart-ass humor to be found in a track like “Necessito…” (the title translates to “I need a clown nose, may I borrow yours…?”). Though Marcha is a frequently enjoyable listen, one can’t help but feel that it’s a bit of a step back (or at least sideways) after the peaks of their previous two albums, both of which would ultimately serve as better introductions to the Fabulosos Cadillacs. – Victor W. Valdivia

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