La Maldición del Timbal

La Maldición del Timbal

  • 流派:Latin 拉丁
  • 语种:其他
  • 发行时间:2016-11-19
  • 类型:录音室专辑

简介

Out of the depths of a nation’s sociopolitical struggle comes one of the most mature albums Puerto Rican music has seen this year. As if they were declaring a rhythmical guasábara – which means war on any invader, in the native Caribbean Taíno tongue – the salsa group known as Orquesta Macabeo unleashes their 4 th studio album, La Maldición del Timbal, an eight track bombshell that proves how far their spirited blend of punk rock attitude and afro-boricua beats have come along. This is much more than their usual musical mayhem. For example, Macabeo now goes deep into the Puerto Rican diaspora’s feeling of nostalgic desperation, with tracks such as Crucero, where they explain how they long to arrive “to a free port”, a clear allusion to the commonwealth’s controversial political limbo. More humanist maturity: on the track Armonía, they finally find a way to approach how love can lie to people, something they tried to do on past albums, but couldn’t quite nail. This time, they sigh, “it’s about living with the lie of living in harmony.” We’ve got a band way past their teens now. Their fans can still remember those times when the fellows from Macabeo where frowned upon by their more purist peers, because of their sudden success with early work such as the classic Salsa Macabra (2010). They’ve always had lyrics. But now they are more than salsa renegades or juvenile pranksters of the afro-Caribbean music scene. The salsa big band is mature enough to talk about the humane, daily life routine: “The routine that tarnishes my retina,” they sing in Rutina. They are centered enough to take on the ugliness of religious hustlers: “The goodwill to give money to the pastor!!,” they cry out in Buena Voluntad. Such smartness goes hand by hand with a newfound poise in their afinque (hard to define salsa term roughly meaning “in-tune- ness,” as well as “tightness” or “sharpness” – of arrangements, of playing, of attitude). Their proverbial street-fighting brass line suddenly dropkicks among a much more debugged percussion line, like in Carrera, a complex tune about competition and age. Here, Macabeo shines musically, as if they relished the challenge of dropping a ballroomsound in front of verses full of swagger. Yeah, their character as a band is sharper in this album. They still will, however, cut your face with a blade: their guapería (boldness) hits like a lightning bolt in Saco’e Trampa (Bag ‘o tricks), where lead singer Mofongo calls out war on a traitor, “because what you do here, you pay here… you hide like an insect, but I’m watching you.” The rabid coming of age of Macabeo makes even more sense, when you see the art on their album cover, done by none other than perennial rebellious art-god Joe Petagno. This master of heavy metal art, responsible for album covers of bands such as Led Zeppellin and Motörhead, produced Macabeo’s cover, a psychedelic work that dignifies the fight endured by this island nation and their musical scene. After all, Puerto Rico and their artists are fighting a Maldición Colonial or “colonial damnation/curse,” as it is explained in the title of the last track of this album, possibly Macabeo’s purest work to date. -Hermes Ayala, cultural journalist and critic.

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