All Good Things

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (158 ratings)
All Good Things album cover
Album Information
EXCLUSIVE

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 58:29

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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
Pacha Massive, All Good Things
Label: Nacional Records

Pacha Massive seem to have the golden touch: a soundtrack spot in one of the most popular Mexican movies of recent years (La Mujer de Mi Hermano), a win in the Latin Alternative Music Conference Battle of the Bands contest (which led to their signing by Nacional Records) and an album release that coincides with the introduction of MTV Tr3s'”Discover and Download” promotion (of which Pacha was the first band ever featured)? The good fortune that this band has received is nothing short of ridiculous. “Don't Let Go,” the album's lead single (and the one featured in La Mujer) proves that the rewards are well justified. Its funky drum programming and Latin guitar provide a beautiful backing to Patricia Lynn's sultry vocals. Elsewhere, Nova (producer, keys, guitar) incorporates all manner of genres into the mix: “La Verdolaga” is reggae-tinged, “Pachanqueando” is all dubby wetness and Colombian cumbia colors nearly everything in one way or another.

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agree with dull

C-dogg

There is really not much substance here. I downloaded this because I like the style of music this purports to be... but this just doesn't do it for me. There's nothing in the production or the singing to actually hold my interest. Pass on this one.

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A wonderful experience

james.l.flowers

Pacha Massive pulled me in with the free sample here on eMusic. I like the nice mellow, latin vibe and Patricia's Soft Vocals and I downloaded album and was not disappointed at all. Really Good Stuff.

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Not Dull At All!

Kibbit

I rather think of this album as a dance album instead of a downtempo, grooves album. The mixture of latin, hip-hop, rock, reggae, and electronica all blend in beautifully together. You must listen to each of them without any expectations or complications and just enjoy the musical passion.

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Dull

Muse8

Dull downtempo. Some of the music is fine for background, the female singer's voice is pleasant enough, but the productions lack depth, the lyrics are formulaic, and many of the tracks are destroyed by truly embarrassing raps.

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Smooth jazz for the lounge crowd

SerenityInSound

There's not a shred of authenticity in this album, it's commercial lounge music. Classifying this as "alternative" or "drum'n'bass" is just false advertising.

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as voted best of 2007

moonfrog12006

a lot of cool and smooth grooves.

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... cool ppl too

nickadelman

i actually got to hang out w/ these guys @ an amigos invisibles show... they are some really decent dudes/ladies... and GREAT music! great fusion of downbeat and latin styles.

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everything to everyone

bigmac

if you try to be everything to everyone you run the risk of being nothing to no one. thus is the pacha massive struggle. "don't let go" is as strong a single track as has been on e-music in a long time. 4 or 5 major movies should pick it up. it is hypnotic. the rest of the songs are generic and self indulgent. they clearly "got it", lets see what they do with it.

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Don't let go

Brooklynnative

That's the one, great track, the rest don't really do it for me.

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Bien por la Pacha

dyei

Una fusion interesante donde la rapeada no enfada ni desentona con los coros hermosas de esta chava. los esperamos pronto en Mexico. el dj

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They Say All Music Guide

Pacha Massive calls itself a “groove collective,” but they are also groove collectors. The 15 tracks on the duo’s torrid debut are, like the Bronx that they call home, a melting pot, where beats and accents combust into multiple, diverse flavors, the attitude is both tough and sweet, and each layer reveals sensations that are at once familiar yet utterly new. It’s a group effort, populated by a sizable guest list, but the prime movers here are the Dominican-born producer/keyboardist Nova and the Colombian-born vocalist Maya, whose shared vision sounds even more global and hip than it looks on paper: Trad and modern Latin rhythms and Spanish vocals clash effortlessly with English-language hip-hop, soulful R&B/Afro-beat horn bursts and rock guitar. Deep dub-inspired bass thumps and crackling dancefloor percussion insinuate into loungey ’70s-derived synth lines. Nova’s programming recalls urban classics without feeling tired, and then there’s Maya, whose sultry, malleable voice is a joyous thing as it wends its way throughout the mix. “Don’t Let Go,” the popular first single, checklists Santana-like guitar, bassy backbeat and a funky, snare-driven beat. “La Verdolaga,” with its spacy, tricky polyrhythms, like several of the tracks here, finds Maya trading her slinky vocals with those of guest voxes, here the intriguing Lucia Pulido and Flex Nug. Although Pacha Massive has by default been lumped in with the rock en español genre, theirs is too experimental and too un-manic an approach to be that easily locked down. These tracks would feel just as right in any self-respecting dance club as they would in a cozy home setting or booming from a radio perched on a city windowsill. No easy feat, that. – Jeff Tamarkin

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