Aterciopelados- Rio

Iconic Colombian Group Builds Upon the Crossover Success of Latin
GRAMMY-winning Oye (2006) With New Album

Mixed in NYC by Hector Castillo (Brazilian Girls, David Bowie, Gustavo Cerati)

Nacional Records is proud to announce that Colombian music icons Aterciopelados will release their highly-anticipated new album, Rio. The new release finds the band aggressively building upon the creative momentum of Oye, the critically-acclaimed album that not only won them a Latin GRAMMY but also a Premio Lo Nuestro award. TIME said, “Aterciopelados’s true skill lies in its ability to take north-of-the-border musical styles… and breathe new life into them, all while giving them a distinctly Colombian sheen.”

Rio is evidence that, as VIBE put it, “For Aterciopelados, maturity has become a form of liberation.” The album was recorded in the band’s hometown of Bogotá and mixed by Héctor Castillo (Brazilian Girls, David Bowie, Gustavo Cerati) in New York City. It is an impassioned, socially conscious record with the group’s signature organic rock sound.

The album’s opener and first single is the title track, a call to action that finds Aterciopelados at a new level of creativity and musicality. It coincides with a proposed Colombian constitutional referendum that declares the country’s bodies of water deserve basic rights. “When I was growing up, the Bogotá River was considered a mythic and iconic place, and now it’s a tiny stream,” says singer Andrea Echeverri. “Musically and lyrically, the track ‘Rio’ is unlike any previous Aterciopelados song. I’m even singing in a different way than in the past. With this one, we reached an entirely new place.”

The album’s guests range from rapper Gloria “Goyo” Martínez (of Colombian hip hop act Choc Quib Town) on “28,” to the Andean group Kapary Walka on “Madre” and “Aguita.” Echeverri’s

daughter, Milagros, makes an appearance on “Ataque de Risa.” The birth of Milagros, now six, was the primary inspiration for her critically lauded self-titled solo album. “This track was originally going to be on a children’s album I’ve been recording with Manolo, my husband, and Milagros in our home studio. With the first couple tracks, Milagros was nervous at the mic but now she approaches it with such confidence and happiness.”

Aterciopelados plan to tour the U.S. in support of ‘Rio’ in early 2009, following the birth of Andrea Echeverri’s second child. They recently completed a European tour with her pregnant belly proudly displayed.
The longtime creative relationship between Echeverri and Buitrago proves to be the source for the band’s musical genius. “We have had quite a musical career, which has evolved over the years through our own identity search and experimentation, finding our own sound,” Echeverri says. “I do some things, like writing the songs and he does the other things, such as producing and imagining the musical vision for the song. We really complement each other musically in a way that works. And more important than anything, we have love and respect for each other.”

viernes, 12 de diciembre de 2008

Amnesty International launches campaign with Song of Aterciopelados


Aterciopelados, Julieta Venegas, Natalie Merchan, Stephen Marley and musicians from around the world together to Amnesty International, Naional Records and Link TV launched, "THE PRICE OF SILENCE"
A song and a video commemorating the 60th anniversary of the Declaration of Human Rights.
All human beings
Born brothers are born free
Not to mention more
It is time to arm
A better world of love and equality ...

Canción Protesta
, the album Oye, of Aterciopelados (Colombia) was adapted to create "The Price of Silence", a special edition to benefit Amnesty International.
In addition to Venegas, Merchant, Echeverri and Hector Buitrago, "The Price of Silence" includes more than 12 artists from various parts of the world, some of which have experienced human rights violations such as the Sudanese rapper Emmanuel Jal, who was a child soldier, and the South African jazz musician Hugh Masekela, who spent years in exile during the era of racial segregation in his country.

The video was filmed in Bogota, Paris, London, Miami, Los Angeles and South Africa, there are artists in an animation of the Assembly of the Organization of the United Nations in New York, was presented by actor Laurence Fishburne and premiere in the events celebrating the 60th anniversary in several countries.

All funds raised through the sale of the song and the video will go to Amnesty International

The artists involved are:
Stephen Marley (Jamaica)
Natalie Merchant (USA)
Julieta Venegas (Mexico)
Aterciopelados (Colombia)
Chali 2NA from Jurassic 5 (USA)
Angelique Kidjo (Benin)
Chiwoniso (Zimbabwe)
Emmanuel Jal (Sudan)
Yungchen Lhamo (Tibet / USA)
Hugh Masekela (South Africa)
Natacha Atlas (UK / Egypt)
Rachid Taha (France / Algeria)
Kiran Ahluwahlia (Canada / India)
Pedro Martínez and Cucu Diamantes of Yerba Buena (USA / Cuba).

to see the video:

click here
click here

1 comentario:

Michael dijo...

Emmanuel is a great guy, who has come from a harsh background, He has stood tall and strong, he has a great story to tell which will inspire everyone.


Check out the EMMANUEL JAL ALBUM (WAR CHILD)

What a great album it is, 10 out of 10

www.sonic360/emmanueljal