more from
El Palmas Music
We’ve updated our Terms of Use to reflect our new entity name and address. You can review the changes here.
We’ve updated our Terms of Use. You can review the changes here.

Yo Bailo Sola

from Mucho Gusto by Acid Coco

/
  • Streaming + Download

    Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
    Purchasable with gift card

      €1.30 EUR  or more

     

  • Acid Coco - Mucho Gusto
    Record/Vinyl + Digital Album

    Acid Coco left Colombia many years ago, but it’s never far away. Channelling cumbia, punk, champeta, reggaeton and other tropical rhythms with electronic sounds in recording sessions that doubled as therapy, the Colombian duo have created a work of visceral emotion that traverses musical landscapes. Love, Colombia and memories of past lives are some of the sources that inspired the group in the process of writing and creating their debut album, Mucho Gusto.

    Sometimes being apart brings you even closer.

    These tracks were recorded over two frenzied sessions in Geneva; ideas, lyrics, music, memories laid down on tape (sorry, hard drive), a creative purge driven by emotional and physical collapse. Creation proved to be the panacea and Colombia the shelter, a place where they could rinse away their demons by evoking dreams of yore, both musically and spiritually.

    On Mucho Gusto you will find rhythms that speak of the density and diversity of Colombia’s music. These are styles of music made to make people dance, whether next to an ear-shattering picó sound system, a fanfare of brass, an
    accordion-led trio or even a family vitrola. They are styles that were born nostalgic, tied to the environments where they came, but also full of devilry, serious songs laced with one-liners and fun-poking wordplay, never afraid to mock itself. This is the spirit of Acid Coco.

    On “Yo Bailo Sola” the cumbia beat is unmistakeable, yet they break with the dogma of tradition (a recurring theme), the song’s female protagonist telling her would-be dance partner to leave her be, she wants to dance alone. The Afro- Colombian party music of champeta takes hold on “Caminando Vas” and “La Chancla”, which use the bargain- bin Casio SK-5 keyboard for a sound heard on picó sound systems up and down the Colombian coast.

    “El Amor de Mis Amores” continues the champeta love-in, its lyrics finding the duo in playful mood, speaking of “The Love of All Loves” who is instantly forgotten when the romance ends. “It's the Colombian way of talking about the tragicomic way we live our lives”, they say. “We're used to making fun of everything, it’s our way to cope and survive all our tragedies.”

    These are tragedies both personal and national, speaking of a Colombia where, despite a peace agreement, activists and social leaders are still being killed on a regular basis. The scars across Colombia still have some way before they
    can heal, a theme that haunts the cumbia “El Lamento”, a pure example of how a song about tragedy can still have a thumping beat.

    “Sin Salida” is them at their most punk, transposing Suicide to the Caribbean coast with distorted bass and lo-fi beats, “Solo Estás Tu” brings tecno merengue (a popular style from the 90s) bang up-to-date, and a softer side emerges on
    “Siempre En Mis Sueños”, which fuses a ballad with a reggaeton beat. “Nuevo Día" has a pop influence which recalls the beginning of the Rock En Español movement in Latin America. Final track “Me Voy” pays tribute to son montuno, salsa being one of the main musical motors of these two Colombians.

    The music of Acid Coco will ring true for anyone who has been paying attention to the diasporic music being made by Colombians around the world – Systema Solar, Combo Chimbita, La Rueda, Bomba Estéreo, the list goes on. Like Acid Coco, these are artists combining Colombian rhythms and folklore with ideas from global music and the Western avant-garde. It’s music with a Colombian heart and soul that’s impossible to shake: “Even if we don't want to sound like Colombians, we always sound like Colombians”, say the group.

    Includes unlimited streaming of Mucho Gusto via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
    ... more

    Sold Out

about

Digital link : ditto.fm/yo-bailo-sola

Acid Coco offer up a female empowering cumbia anthem
on first single from upcoming debut album.

On “Yo Bailo Sola” there is no mistaking the cumbia beat, but Acid Coco break with the dogma of tradition (a recurring
theme in their work), the song’s female protagonist telling her would-be dance partner to leave her be, she wants to dance
this cumbia alone.

Breaking the same traditions that also inform their work is all par for the course for Acid Coco, a Colombian duo whose
debut album Mucho Gusto will be released later this year. Recorded across two charged sessions in Geneva, it’s an album that finds emotional and physical catharsis through evoking the music and memories of a Colombia where they no longerreside, but which looms large across their work.

Each song is a vignette of Colombian life: a romance set to a champeta rhythm; recollections of falling asleep to the sound
of a tambor beat as family members party across the room; songs about tongue-in-cheek discoteca loves but also breakups;and reality always present, with the spectre of violence, that so many Colombians lived (and continue to live) through, never far away.

“Yo Bailo Sola” takes inspiration from cumbia from the 1950s. Music that speaks of spirituality and solemnity but that is
filled with mischief. As a Gibson riff and Colombian tiple propel the song forwards we hear Andrea break the conventions of cumbia. Often a couples dance, she tells her admirer: “yo bailo sola” (“I dance alone”).

“Cumbia is something we grew up with, it has always accompanied us, it is part of who we are!” (“Este ritmo es algo con loque crecimos, nos acompaña desde siempre, es parte de lo que somos!), say the duo, whose album also includes champeta,son montuno, reggaeton andtecnomerengue, as well as their own tropical punk hybrids.

lyrics

Sentado en la arena
y al va y ven de la mar
una linda morena se menea al pasar

y al ritmo de la cumbia
yo la invito a bailar
y ella a mi me sonrie
sin siquiera mirar

luego se gira y me dice
si tu quieres gozar
esta cumbia al bailar
deja que yo te enseñe
que no hay que acosar
la cumbia es la reina
y al soltarme veras
que si yo bailo sola.

credits

from Mucho Gusto, released October 2, 2020
Mastering at The Carvery Studios
Ilustration, Design and Art Direction Daria Mechkat
El Palmas Music

license

all rights reserved

tags

about

Acid Coco Switzerland

Colombian duo Acid Coco is influenced by the tambores of La Caderona, the sweat tears dropping from the ceiling in Juanchito, rhythms of cumbia, porro, bullerengue and champeta. It’s a journey up and down, down and up through the beautiful colors of music! ... more

shows

contact / help

Contact Acid Coco

Streaming and
Download help

Redeem code

Report this track or account

If you like Acid Coco, you may also like: