Complete your life with the music of Santiago

Welcome back to Teca, Latin America is a Country’s own jukebox, where we’ll try to introduce you to some of the coolest, hippest, most recent music from cities around Latin America. So let’s get to it.

Santiago, the capital city of Chile, will be hosting the final of Copa América in a few months, so I haven’t stopped thinking about it. But it is also a very prolific place, music-wise. In 2011, El País, Spain’s biggest newspaper, dubbed the country “The new paradise of pop.” Chilean musicians argued there that their feeling of isolation (trapped in a country between the Andes and the Pacific ocean), combined with a higher than average internet penetration (the second highest in Latin America–after Uruguay) helped create and foster a local “scene.” This bred a host of netlabels and a movement of musicians posting their works online, which allowed some artists to be heard abroad and become international sensations.

One of the biggest successes has been Javiera Mena (whom I covered elsewhere). But there are many great bands and artists coming from Chile (and not just from Santiago, but I have to focus), which made me debate for maybe too long about who should be included here.

So maybe I left out some important stuff, maybe I got some things wrong, but after all of the dancing and headbanging, and the thoughtful consideration of melodies and lyrics you will experience in brief, you won’t care much about that.

So let’s start.

Ana Tijoux

The other big music success story from Chile is the one of this French-Chilean rapper. She was born and grew up in France because her parents were fleeing from the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet. But in the early 90’s she moved to Santiago and there sparked a career in hip-hop that, at least for now, has peaked with her 2014 album Vengo (which, as we mentioned, was nominated for a Grammy). Probably the most solid Latin American album from last year, Vengo raps against colonialism, against patriarchy, in favor of the unity of people, and goes around the world to find some of its very fine samplings. Here you have “Somos Sur,” a track that features British Palestinian “First lady of Arabic hip-hop” Shadia Mansour rapping in Arabic.

Gepe

Another success story is Daniel Alejandro Riveros, better known as Gepe, whose 2010 album Audiovisión blew up around the Spanish-speaking world. OK, the Spanish-speaking indie world. But still, impressive. His mix of Chilean folk with pop has proved massively popular. It also helps that his songs come full of heart. Check it out for yourself in the single “Bomba Chaya” from his 2012 album GP.

Dënver

Yet another band that has been able to reach out beyond Chile’s borders is this electropop duo who, yes, were formed in another city, San Felipe, but they have made a career in Santiago. They also found the spotlight in 2010, with their (heavily danceable) album Música, gramática, gimnasia, which, by the way, included an homage to Jurassic Park (in “Lo que quieras”). In 2013 they released Fuera de campo, an album with more orchestration, more detail to melodies and much funkier tunes. That’s where “Revista de gimnasia,” the song below, comes from. Also, they are named after a cartoon dinosaur. Cool.

Javier Barría

Barría made a name for himself putting his music on MySpace and contacting other musicians around Latin America through the internet. Thus, he has been able to tour a few countries outside of Chile. He eventually moved to Facebook, YouTube and BandCamp, but his music continued to be well-crafted storytelling accompanied by beautiful loops and guitar sounds. Here you can find all of his discography, for free, online. And below, you can listen to “Geometría,” one of his songs that has stuck with me.

Tunacola

Are you like me and are you suffering from the Northern hemisphere winter? Well, it’s summer down south, and the electropop group Tunacola might have the tune of the season with “Danky” (from their second album Todos los veranos del mundo), an homage to the absurd name of an ice cream sold in Chile. By the way, had you ever been so jealous of a music video?

That’s it for now. But also check out Ases Falsos, Fother Muckers, Astro, Nano Stern, Camila Moreno, R.E.S and Los Búnkers.

Did we miss something? Do you have any other suggestions? Leave them on the comments below, or send them to our twitter or Facebook.

Also, see the rest of Teca here.

 

Further Reading

No one should be surprised we exist

The documentary film, ‘Rolé—Histórias dos Rolezinhos’ by Afro-Brazilian filmmaker Vladimir Seixas uses sharp commentary to expose social, political, and cultural inequalities within Brazilian society.

Kenya’s stalemate

A fundamental contest between two orders is taking place in Kenya. Will its progressives seize the moment to catalyze a vision for social, economic, and political change?

More than a building

The film ‘No Place But Here’ uses VR or 360 media to immerse a viewer inside a housing occupation in Cape Town. In the process, it wants to challenge gentrification and the capitalist logic of home ownership.