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Imaginaries [sound recording] / Quetzal.

By: Material type: MusicMusicPublisher number: SFW CD 40563 | Smithsonian FolkwaysLanguage: English, Spanish Publication details: [Washington, D.C.] : Smithsonian Folkways, p2011.Description: 1 sound disc (55 min.) : digital ; 4 3/4 in. + 1 booketSubject(s):
Contents:
2+0+1+2=cinco = 2+0+1+2=five (4:37) -- Imaginaries (2:51) -- Estoy aquí = I am here (5:23) -- Time will tell (5:20) -- Luz y miel = Light and honey (5:09) -- Witness (3:34) -- Tragafuegos = Fire breathers (3:36) -- Duérmete = Go to sleep (5:38) -- Dreamers, schemers (3:08) -- Intifada (3:41) -- Por eso = That's why (5:13) -- Todo lo que tengo = All that I have (5:07).
Quetzal (Martha Gonzalez, vocals, congas ; Cesar Castro, vocals jarana jarocha ; Juan Perez ; bass ; Quetzal Flores, jarana jarocha, electric guitar ; Quincy McCrary ; vocal,s piano, keyboard ; Andy Mendoza, drums, cajon, vocals).Summary: The music of Quetzal is at once visceral and intellectual. Sometimes thought of as a rock band, its members draw from a much larger web of musical, cultural, and social engagement. On Imaginaries, they creatively combine shades of East L.A.'s soundscape, traditional son jarocho of Veracruz, salsa, R&B, and more to express the political and social struggle for self-determination and self-representation, which ultimately is a struggle for dignity.
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Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult CD Adult CD Main Library CD WORLD Quetzal Available 33111007874791
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

A band based in East Los Angeles, Quetzal seek to "create good music that tells the social, cultural, political, and musical stories of Chicanas and Chicanos of East Los Angeles and their kindred spirits, locally and around the globe." They generally succeed in both of those goals, though not evenly across all songs. The album opens with a beautiful 5/4 composition that blends the two purposes handily: with a deceptively light touch and tight harmonies, "2+0+1+2=Cinco" proposes a future environmental dystopia; "Time Will Tell" and the spectacular "Luz y Miel" are similarly well-crafted songs that pair a message of social uplift with a compelling musical concept. But when things fall flat, the thud can be pretty loud. On the lyrical side, there's the inexcusably mean-spirited "Duérmete," in which a "cynical man" gets his apparently just reward by being hit by a bus; despite its infectious son montuno beat, the song is just nasty. And one doesn't have to be a political reactionary to be a little bit discomfited by the uncritically supportive "Intifada," nor does one have to be a starry-eyed romantic to be dismayed that the message of "Todo Lo Que Tengo" -- a simple and tenderly gorgeous song of romantic devotion and commitment -- is tempered in the album's liner notes by carefully correct politics: "The individual is important to the marriage and/or community, but not at its expense." The band's forays into 1970s-style soul-funk ("Witness," particularly) are also pretty underwhelming, tending to privilege dense harmonies and starry-eyed Aquarian lyrics over discernible melodies. ~ Rick Anderson

Program notes in English and Spanish (18, 19 p. : ill.) inserted in container.

2+0+1+2=cinco = 2+0+1+2=five (4:37) -- Imaginaries (2:51) -- Estoy aquí = I am here (5:23) -- Time will tell (5:20) -- Luz y miel = Light and honey (5:09) -- Witness (3:34) -- Tragafuegos = Fire breathers (3:36) -- Duérmete = Go to sleep (5:38) -- Dreamers, schemers (3:08) -- Intifada (3:41) -- Por eso = That's why (5:13) -- Todo lo que tengo = All that I have (5:07).

Quetzal (Martha Gonzalez, vocals, congas ; Cesar Castro, vocals jarana jarocha ; Juan Perez ; bass ; Quetzal Flores, jarana jarocha, electric guitar ; Quincy McCrary ; vocal,s piano, keyboard ; Andy Mendoza, drums, cajon, vocals).

Recorded at Coney Island Studios, Glendale, Calif.

The music of Quetzal is at once visceral and intellectual. Sometimes thought of as a rock band, its members draw from a much larger web of musical, cultural, and social engagement. On Imaginaries, they creatively combine shades of East L.A.'s soundscape, traditional son jarocho of Veracruz, salsa, R&B, and more to express the political and social struggle for self-determination and self-representation, which ultimately is a struggle for dignity.

Compact disc.

Sung in English or Spanish.

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