Track Listing 1. Nino Bomba 2. Afroman 3. Ode to Mauricio Garcas 4. Banano's Bar 5. Monster Truck 6. Encendedor 7. Bungaloo Punta Cometa 8. Aquamosh 9. I've Got That Milton Pacheco Kinda Feeling - (Melancolic mix) 10. Pornoshop 11. Savage Sucker Boy - (featuring Pocahontas Freaky Groove) 12. Mr. P. Mosh
| Details | | Contributing Artists: | April March, Cafe Tacuba, Cafe Tacvba, Lester Butler, Pocahontas Freaky Groove, Sukia | | Distributor: | EMI Music Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Plastilina Mosh: Jonas (vocals, guitar, bass); Alejandro Rosso (keyboards, bass, programming, background vocals). Additional personnel includes: April March (vocals); Catchup, Haas (guitar); Lester Butler (harmonica); Hernan Gonzalez (upright bass); Joey Waronker (drums); Tom, Rob, Bibi Zambrano, Christophe Lesieur (background vocals); Cafe Tacuba, Sukia. Producers include: Tom Rothrock, Rob Schnapf, Plastilina Mosh, Sukia, Cafe Tacuba. Mexican duo Plastilina Mosh exploded onto the Mexican music scene with a recorded debut which was the fastest selling album in that nation since Selena. While comparisons to Beck deservedly abound, this duo puts a new spin on the "everything goes" ideology, delivering lyrics in Spanish, English, French and German and creating a unique brand of sound collage which has appealed to all ages ("Mr P. Mosh," for example, proved to be a huge success with listeners quite a few years younger than the twentysomethings who wrote it). With AQUAMOSH, the sonic smorgasbord is ready to be served up worldwide. The album's opener, "Nino Bomba" (Baby Bomba) features raspy rap vocals and vintage synth sounds, while "Afroman" delves into soul samples and heavy guitar riffs, as well as Plastilina Mosh's calling card--a repetitive, catchy chorus which heads straight for the subconscious, never to be wrested free. "Ode to Mauricio Garces" mixes jazz guitars with string arrangements, while the album's title track is a funky, spacey slow groove, with French-language backup vocals and jazzy keyboards. It's worth noting that while "Mr. P. Mosh" may a hit among the sandbox set, its cartoony feel will captivate just about anyone.
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