Description: Additional Information from Movie Mars Product Description Personnel: Daniel Pacheco (vocals, guitar); Andrés Barrios (vocals, clarinet); Julio Briceño, Armando Lovera Rada (vocals, percussion); José Luis Pardo (guitar); Eddie Cordero, Rhomy López, Ollantay Velásquez, Marián Gutiérrez, Amanda Ochoa (violin); Otto Rodríguez, Mónica Gómez (viola); María José Romero, Juan Pablo Méndez (cello); Nadje Noorhius (trumpet); Isaac Kaplan (trombone); Armando Figueredo (keyboards, background vocals); Juan Manuel Roura (drums, background vocals); Mauricio "Maurimix" Arcas (percussion, background vocals). Recording information: Cutupra Studios, New York, NY; Faultline Studios, San Francisco, CA; Fountain Studio, Paris; Sala De Máquinas, Caracas; Sunny Studios, Miami, FL; Teatro Teresa Carreño. Director: Alvaro Paiva Bimbo. Repeat After Me is Los Amigos Invisibles' sixth recording overall, and their third for Nacional. While the band's "new gozadera" sound remains, the level of sophistication at work here was only hinted at on their previous two offerings for the label. The Venezuelan sextet combines grooves that push the envelope of songwriting, arranging, and production at every turn. While Commercial and Not So Commercial utilized inspirations from Daft Punk to Prince's Paisley Park, the inspirations on Repeat After Me reach back further -- toward the soulful funk of the mid- to late '70s, smooth disco, and Latin soul, with just enough lithe rock to expand the dynamics. "La Que Me Gusta"'s intro bassline is swiped straight from the Supremes' "You Can't Hurry Love," but the melody is less urgent, modern, warmer, a new breed of Latin soul. By contrast," "Sex Appeal" is pure wonky funk. "Río Porque No Fue un Sueño" melds Isley Brothers groove, Leroy Hutson's seductiveness, and Santana's guitar soloing circa Caravanserai and Welcome. With "Stay," a desperate, broken love song and the set's longest cut, the funk remains, but it's spacy, nocturnal, and emotive. The participation of the swinging trio Los Hermanoes Naturales on "Mostro" adds wild, scattershot gypsy jazz to the proceedings to boot. Throughout, the horn and string arrangements on some of the aforementioned cuts, or the fingerpopping -- not to mention hilarious -- "Reino Animal," expand the colorful palette of sounds and layered textures found on the set. Disco gets a real hearing on the largely instrumental "Robot Love" and the dancefloor banger "Invisible Love," near the album's end where the strings are straight out Barry White and the synths are pure Giorgio Moroder, all woven through this killer neo-Latin soul frame. Despite the obvious influential references, Los Amigos Invisibles are able to stretch and morph them into something completely their own. This is due in no small part to Julio Briceño's vocals. No matter the music's intensity, he manages to add this loose, laid-back feel to every utterance -- whether he is singing in Spanish or English -- that makes the party roll at a simmering heat. José Luis Pardo's production and mix are equal partners with the band in this creation. Together they make Repeat After Me another step up the creativity ladder for Los Amigos Invisibles. ~ Thom Jurek About Movie Mars All items are Brand New. We offer unbeatable prices, quick shipping times and a wide selection second to none. Purchases come with a 30-day Satisfaction Guarantee (minus Shipping & Handling fees) on all unopened products. All items are from licensed Distributors. We do not deal with any Bootleg or Used items!
Price: 11.5 USD
Location: North Carolina
End Time: 2025-01-13T17:18:41.000Z
Shipping Cost: 0 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 30 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Return policy details:
Format: CD
Release Year: 2013
Genre: Latin Pop/Rock
Artist: Amigos Invisibles
Record Label: Naci, Nacional Records
Release Title: Repeat after Me