NPR Music - Alt.Latino's favorite albums of 2024

Episode Date: December 4, 2024

It's that time of the year — figuring out the best Latin music of 2024. And every year, it gets harder and harder (seriously, it's difficult!) for Ana and Felix to narrow down their extensive lists.... Joined by NPR culture reporter Isabella Gomez Sarmiento, the three round up the best albums of this year.Songs featured in this episode:•Angélica Garcia, "El Que" from Gemelo•Hinds, "Coffee" from Viva Hinds•Spanish Harlem Orchestra, "Lluego El Caballero (feat. Gilberto Santa Ross)" from Swing Forever•Latin Mafia, "tengo mucho ruido." from TODOS LOS DÍAS TODO EL DÍA•RaiNao, "readysita" from CAPICÚ•Orquesta Akokán, "Caracoles" from CaracolesAudio for this episode of Alt.Latino was edited and mixed by Simon Rentner. Editorial support from Hazel Cills. Our project manager is Grace Chung. NPR Music's executive producer is Suraya Mohamed. Our VP of Music and Visuals is Keith Jenkins.See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Okay, do the intro again. Okay, Felix. Well, we're off to a great start. It's that time of the year. It's that time of the year where Felix and I are losing our freaking marbles. From NPR music, this is out Latino. I'm Felix Contreras. And I'm Anna Maria Sayer.
Starting point is 00:00:28 Felix and I are losing our marbles because it's almost the end of the year, which means we had to literally. almost cry every single day and try to pick our favorite music of the year. It was so difficult we had to bring in an expert to help us out. To discuss our most favorite best albums of the year, we have brought on the, what is a really grandiose word, Felix, that I could use. Venerable. There you go.
Starting point is 00:00:55 Isabella Gomez-Sarviento. Isa welcome to the show. Alisa, I'm happy to be here, happy to mediate any conflict that arises during this taping. Well, we already know. We already know it's going to run. Especially picking our favorites, Felix. We don't really conflict over that.
Starting point is 00:01:11 It's, it, because we, I always learn. Stay in our lane. Right. We stay in our lane, right. So we get into our personal lives, so we need a mediator. But anyway, let's get, we're not talking about that today. No, we're not. Okay, all three of us, we always have trouble selecting this stuff.
Starting point is 00:01:27 And I always put all of my selections in a playlist, a single playlist. You always put all your selections in a playlist? Yeah. So that I can. help. I listen to them and decide, okay, which ones do I want to feature on the show? Right? This year I had five different playlists. I had Tung Bao, which was like the Afro-Cuban salsa thing. I had gentle. I had sway. Gentle. I had beats. I can't get over beats, what is in beats? I need to know. That's what the playlist are for. You listen.
Starting point is 00:01:59 You got to go to the playlist on my Spotify. Look for you on Spotify. You have to go. And I had to leave some out. I had to leave some of these artists out, but I listened to each one of their records. Okay. Wait, I'm looking at this right now. Sorry, Fabiola Mendez is in beats? What is beats? I was imagining like, oh no, no, no. Fabiola, Daimae-Rosena, Anna Tiju. Okay, so you were to organize yourself with these playlists. And so were our colleagues because we have a whole list of our best albums of the year on npr.org slash music. Everyone should check it out. So now, without further do, Felix,
Starting point is 00:02:39 it's Alt Latinos' best albums of the year. And you get to go first. And I get to go first. Oh, I love when I get to go first. Okay. What I have brought for you is someone I have mentioned at least once previous this year. I think Issa maybe mentioned her at one point as well.
Starting point is 00:03:00 So we've been on to this one for a while. This is the amazing Angelica Garcia. She's Mexican-American from L.A., and this is her album, Hemelo. I'm going to play you, El Ke. The amazing Angelica Garcia. I think this whole record, she's described it over and over again as kind of this rebirth of sorts for her. I mean, she goes through this whole journey of exploring what being a twin is.
Starting point is 00:04:19 It's like a beautiful idea of what is like a concept album that is really carried through from start to finish. Obviously, it's literally called chemelo twin. And she explores pain and joy. and beauty and also her twin identities, obviously being Mexican-American. And you hear her reaching, reaching, reaching back into almost like these ancestral, not only feelings, but sounds and sensation. She has moments.
Starting point is 00:04:44 You can kind of hear it on this track where she actually gets almost like guttural in how she screams, she shout, she yells, she kind of really lays it all out there. There's beautiful softer moments. There's electrocumbia. There's quieter vocals. But really, to me, the strength. here is when she lets it all go in this very like, I don't know, controlled chaos a bit where you feel that it's crazy and it's building and there's percussion and there's noise,
Starting point is 00:05:13 but at the same time it's cathartic, it's therapeutic. She describes it as literally her being dipped into ice water and that is exactly what this feels like. Yeah, I think this is an album I've come back to several times this year and it's like every time I find something new in it because it is, you can tell it's, it's, you can tell it's such a personal journey for Angelica, and I think as a listener, it takes you in a number of directions. Like, every single listening experience is different. Every time you find comfort in a different part of what she's describing in terms of her faith, her womanhood. It's her tracing an ancestral lineage that I think takes you on a new spin every single time.
Starting point is 00:05:56 This is her first entirely Spanish language album. I think there's a ton that she's able to excavate for the first time as a product of that, especially because she really is warring with identity. And I mean, to me, it does feel very much like one of those deaths to self type of moments. Like you can feel that level of energy transformation as she moves through this. And I think doing this in Spanish has really allowed her to explore that. Good call. Okay, Issa, your turn.
Starting point is 00:06:31 Okay, I'm going to take us to one of the. cities that has had some of the most fascinating musical input for me this year, which is Madrid. This is the fourth studio album by the indie rock band Heinz. It is called Viva Heinz, very appropriately. This is a band I've been following for a really long time. I went to one of their very first shows in the U.S. when I was in college in 2016. They went through a really big rebirth over the pandemic. The original bassist and drummer left the band. I think they had some issues with their label, they basically didn't know if they were going to be able to keep making music. So the spirit of this album is very much rooted in like the rebirth of the band and the
Starting point is 00:07:12 perseverance of the band. This song is called Coffee. I like blank coffee and cigarettes and flowers from boys that I'm not slipping with. So something I really, really love about Heinz is that the two guitarists and singers, Anna and Carlotta do all of this sort of like back and forth calling to each other and harmonizing on the songs. Their music is really just kind of rooted in like friendship and girlhood and having fun together and they poke fun a lot at how a lot of men in the indie rock scene don't take them seriously, but they also don't take themselves too seriously. And this is an album that I just really loved
Starting point is 00:08:35 and I was really happy to see them keep going after all of the ups and downs that they've had over the last couple of years. I love so much stylistically what they're doing because it does does feel in a way like this kind of nod back to some of what earlier put Spain on the map. Like I'm thinking first coming out of like Franco era, like really like a lot of innovative punky, rocky, exciting. Like, I don't know, a little bit alternative, a little bit angsty, but also just fun music. And this feels like a really strong homage to that in a way that is also nice to listen to. they're not force feeding you your vegetables but also saying like hey we come from this lineage especially Madrid because Madrid is getting very electronic very flamenco which is all great things and there's a ton of stuff and I can go on for 20 years about how much I love the Madrid scene right now but this feels like a little bit off side for me in a way that is really refreshing
Starting point is 00:09:34 good call man love this yay yay yesa claps for Issa felix what did you bring today. Okay, again, my two picks for the year, it was very difficult to do, but I decided to stay within one specific genre. It's strictly within the Salsa Afro-Caribbean dance thing. I chose Spanish Harlem Orchestra's Swink Forever was the name of the album. The name of the track, Yago El Caballero, and it features Hilberto Santa Rosa from Puerto Rico, who's known as El Caballero de Salsa. Check this one out. Get your dancing shoes on. Always on, Felix. Always ready.
Starting point is 00:10:56 This band is just great. Great salsa bands are musicians' dreams are musicians' dreams. because the musicianship is just so high quality. And then you drop in an incredible vocalist like Hilberto Santa Rosa, and the combination just explodes as you hear this. Again, the album was called Swing Forever. Spanish Harlem Orchestra, man, their mainstays. Oscar Hernandez is the piano player, the musical arranger, the leader of this band.
Starting point is 00:11:26 Props to him, man. Felix, this is unfair music to play for me at 10 in the morning when I'm stuck in this video. I hear two notes and I'm like, okay, let's go. Yeah, I just love Hilberto Santa Rosa's voice. That is so nostalgic for like big Christmas party. Like, I love it so much. We're going to take a quick break, but before that,
Starting point is 00:11:56 let me remind you to go to npr.org slash music where we have an amazing, amazing package collection where all our colleagues did the same thing that had to narrow it down, select our best music. NPR.org slash music. Check it out. We'll be right back. Okay, Anna, you're out.
Starting point is 00:12:13 Oh, I just looked at what I have next. Okay, now I'm really excited. Okay, these guys, I'm like such a champion of them. Their name is Latin Mafia. They're a band coming out of Mexico City. They're from Monterey originally. They're three brothers. We always love the family projects.
Starting point is 00:12:32 Very cute. This is a very highly anticipated album for me, and I think many. They've released a ton of. of singles, but this is actually their first record. So really excited about this. This is the track called Tengo Much Ruido, and it's off of their new album, All Those Days, All the Day.
Starting point is 00:13:41 Trampositos. God me bless me. And I'm going to cry. And I'm going to cry. We do always love a feature from an abuelita. you have to remember their three brothers. They've been working on this project together. It's amazing to me what they've been able to do.
Starting point is 00:14:05 They've kept everything literally within the three of them. So they produce and write exclusively together. They don't bring anyone else into the project. That was obviously words from their abuelita. The concept of the song is that they're talking about, you know, how do we carry on? How do we do this? How do we keep going?
Starting point is 00:14:24 And she's kind of offering her very silly blessing to them. But production-wise, I love what they do. I think they're really beautiful. They're playing in the electronic space, but they bring in a ton of live instrumentation. They have these gorgeous piano moments throughout. They have a lot of more intense moments. Like, if you listen to a song, Nuka'i Seido onesto, they play like a really intensive, kind of like jarring sound. They push home the percussion.
Starting point is 00:14:48 But above all else, it's the lyrics for me, Felix. It's like the way that they constantly use love and pain as well. one emotion is incredible to me. It's the most Mexican thing on the planet, right? To have to take that love and pain stance. It's really intense and it's beautiful. And I got to talk to them at the Latin Grammys. And they talk so much about wanting to be honest
Starting point is 00:15:12 and wanting to be that music for people who need it. And it's just really incredible to see them having so much success. I know they were nominated for Best New Artist as well at the Latin Grammys. So I think we're really going to see a big year for them ahead after that as well. And I just want to add before we, go to the next song. I used to have a good friend of mine, a musician friend of mine. I'm not going to mention his name back in Fresno, where I would go pick him up and he lived with his mom. And his mom gave us a blessing every time we left. She would say, no undone comobagos.
Starting point is 00:15:46 Don't. Just behave yourselves. This is also, I have to say, Felix, you would love these guys because they're so the vibe that you love. They're like talking over each other the whole time. I don't know if you remember in my tape. They call each other borderline. They're like, we're so crazy. We're super 8-DHD. They're like talking over. They're very like, I understand why their grandma talks to them like that.
Starting point is 00:16:09 Trampositos. Tramposito. Okay, let's see. He's like you're next, man. All right. From Monterey, I'm taking us to, drum roll, please. La Isla del Encanto, Puerto Rico. I was so excited when I saw you put this on.
Starting point is 00:16:29 Yes. So this is Rainnau. She is part of this cohort of really exciting women and non-binary artists working in regitone coming out of Puerto Rico right now. Like Young Miko, Villano Antigiano, Pao, Pao. What I love about Rinaldo is that she is truly the most, like, alt-experimentalist of this group. This is her debut full-length album. It came out in February. It's called Capikou.
Starting point is 00:16:54 And I'm going to play you a little something before. we talk about her. This song is called Redisita. I love this album so much because I feel like Rai now reinvents herself on every single track. Like in this one we have this like Batchata thing going into EDM. She's doing salsa, she's doing R&B, she's doing hip-hop, she's doing jazz. I mean, it's such a full scope of genres that she's playing in. that she's playing in in such an organic way. She is a trained saxophonist. She studied theater at a university in Puerto Rico.
Starting point is 00:18:12 Her dad was a salsa singer. I mean, you can just see how all of these influences really come across in this, like, color palette that she's dabbling in. I love the fact that she's a theater kid because I feel like this album is theatrical. Like, if there was one word for it, it's that. She's just basically showing off that she can do all of these things
Starting point is 00:18:41 and she can pull them off too. So that's Capicou by right now. She is such a force. I have been so lucky enough to have watched her perform multiple times in the past few weeks between Latin Grammys in Puerto Rico. Oh my God. And to see her in all of her power and all of her essence on stage at Al Anfie in Puerto Rico, people love her because she represents so much of what they're trying to do
Starting point is 00:19:07 musically right now on the island. She is like absolutely the future of where the genre is going in a very, herself way. And that I think is exactly what's happening. Regetone is not straight ahead Dembo in the way that it was. It is now electronic. It's, you know, adding in cumbia breaks. It's adding in salsa breaks. It's adding in every single possible influence, like what you just stated, of where she comes from and calling that authentic Puerto Rican music. And people really recognize that in her and support her for it. And I just think truly, like, she is going places. Final track I'm going to bring in for the show is a band that is looking backwards. It's a, it's a band. I would call it a salsa
Starting point is 00:19:50 band. They're from New York, New Jersey. The band is called Orkesta Akukan. And it is, the Akukhan is a Yoruba word meaning from the heart. It's led by this pianist arranger, Michael Eckroff, and producer Jacob Plase, who also went to Cuba, learned how to play Tres. They created this band and this record is called Caracoles. I saw this band, recently here in D.C. And what it is, it's like, it really is a phenomenal throwback to check this out. 1940s, mid-40s, Afro-Cubing music from New York City with the Machito Orchestra. This is called Caracolus title track from their album.
Starting point is 00:21:10 These guys can groove. Seriously? Every time I hear any of their tracks, I'm like, wow. They carry something special. No, I was going to say, you keep us grounded. Like, I can't imagine a better song to close out the show. Wow, from where we started and where we ended, I want to play those tracks side by side.
Starting point is 00:21:54 Again, we want to remind you, please go to NPR.org slash music. That's my other favorite part of the year is just going in and listen to all of our office mates, all of our pals, what they're listening to. They went through the same trouble we did, the same anguish. I'm trying to narrow it down to a couple. It is painful. Yeah. We want to remind you that these have been our favorite albums of the year.
Starting point is 00:22:16 Next week, we're going to go over our favorite songs of the year. Ooh. Yeah, a whole different set of music. You have been listening to Alt Latino from NPR Music. Our audio editor is Simon Retner. We get editorial support from Hazel Sills. A person who keeps us on track is Grace Chung. Sorayo Mohammed is executive producer of NPR music
Starting point is 00:22:44 and gives us a nice stare-down whenever we go too far, from what we're supposed to be doing. And Haffey and Chief is Keith's VP of Music and Visuals. Let me just say before I sign off. It's like this is so much fun. I mean, what we do is a privilege to be able to listen to all this stuff that's out there and try to present it to all you folks out there listening. It can be a lot of effort at the end of the year to kind of sum all this down.
Starting point is 00:23:09 But we want to thank you guys for listening and supporting us all year. And a huge thank you to Miss. Isabelago massarmento. God bless thank you for having me. Thank you for mitigating. What did you call yourself? Mitigating?
Starting point is 00:23:30 Mitigating? Mitigating what? Anna thinks I'm a mediator. She's a mediator. That's right. I'm Felix Contreras. And I'm Anna Maria Sayer. Thanks for listening.

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