
Rodrigo y Gabriela describe their style as 'Fusion
music': "It's mainly got Latin harmonies and rhythms
but the structure is rock. It's not jazz because it's
structured, and we don't improvise; our solos are exactly
what's on the record, as a metal fan and guitarist
you always want to hear the same f**king solo!"
Influences range from family salsa records to Gabriela's
aunt's Pink Floyd, Black Sabbath, Queen, and Led Zeppelin
vinyl, with Rodrigo also embracing a similar classic
rock lineage. But, crucially, they grew up during Mexico's
'metal era.' "People expected two acoustic guitarists
would play classical music, but we dropped in extracts
from Led Zep, Hendrix and Metallica, then we did the
same with "Stairway to Heaven!" Their music
is instrumental "with very lyrical themes."
Mentions of flamenco influences raise sharp responses: "To
many music fans, it sounds like flamenco, and we're
great flamenco fans, but we don't play it" says
Gabriela. "The only similarity is that our music
is guitar music and it's very rhythmic."
This album's producer John Leckie (Radiohead, Muse,
My Morning Jacket) arrived on the scene via a demo
sent to him by their Irish record label, and he called
the very next day. The three agreed to record 'live',
and Rodrigo and Gabriela were placed in the same room
in a studio in Bath, England, to perform as if on stage: "We
played each track over and over, and only 'Orion' has
overdubs." Ruby Lakatos, the fiery gypsy violinist
was the only outsider, and his presence on "Ixtapa" is
wonderful. "We saw him on TV", Gabriela remembers, "Playing
at a concert in Amsterdam, and we sent him our music.
He improvised this whole piece in two hours!" From
the many, many live versions, Leckie chose 'the one.'
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