El Guincho
By Sophie in El Guincho | 4 comments

Mistletone is proud to announce the return of Barcelona’s foremost exponent of ecstatic tropical rave, El Guincho.
It’s been an incredible year for El Guincho’s Pablo Díaz-Reixa. After releasing his debut album Alegranza in Spain on his own label, then in Australia on Mistletone, he was signed worldwide to XL and has been touring the world, turning audiences on to his clattering dance beats, sing-along Spanish vocals and sun-drenched, sampladelic melodies.
Having wowed Australian audiences with his deliriously fun and joyful live performances with Architecture in Helsinki last May, this time Pablo Díaz-Reixa will be bringing percussionist Aleix Clavera to make El Guincho live show twice as hectic!
Catch El Guincho’s headline shows in Sydney and Melbourne, and at the Laneway Festival around Australia this summer. It’ll be an intoxicating, bacchanalian, tropicalia party you’ll never want to end….
EL GUINCHO AUSTRALIAN TOUR 2009
Friday, 30 January SYDNEY HEADLINE SHOW @ Oxford Arts Factory
El Guincho w/ extra special guest Mountains In The Sky. Tickets $27+BF on sale Friday 21 November from Moshtix.
Saturday, 31 January - BRISBANE LANEWAY
Sunday, 1 February - MELBOURNE LANEWAY
Thursday, 5 February MELBOURNE HEADLINE SHOW @ The Corner
El Guincho w/ extra special guest Qua. Tickets $27+BF on sale Friday 21 November from The Corner
Friday, 6 February - PERTH LANEWAY
Saturday, 7 February - ADELAIDE LANEWAY
Sunday, 8 February 2009 - SYDNEY LANEWAY
El Guincho on Myspace MP3: Palmitos Park MP3: El Guincho remix of Architecture In Helsinki’s Like It Or Not
El Guincho’s mind expanding debut album Alegranza was given its first release outside Spain by Mistletone in March 2008 and on XL in the UK and USA in October 2008. Mistletone is proud to present the return of El Guincho on his second Australian tour in 2009.
“Mind-boggling Afro, Calypso and Tropicalia-flavoured debut… pitching percussion and tumbling rhythm against a collage of tropical psyche-funk samples, uplifting melodies and pulsing vocal chants. It’s club music with an organic and ethnographic twist, as potently danceable and accessible as it is proudly locative.” - THE AGE
El Guincho is Pablo Díaz-Reixa, born in the Canary Islands and now based in Barcelona. Pablo went to music school as a kid but then left at the age of 14 to become a soccer or tennis star. Fortunately, he failed at both!
After some nomadic experiencies around Europe, he arrived in Barcelona at age twenty, started a hip hop project called Los Feriantes, played drums in the freestyle jam band Dead Man on Campus and finally formed Coconot with his cousin on guitar.
As Coconot he released “Novo Tropicalismo Errado” in February 2006 as a result of two years of non-stop listening to Tropicália and Kraut-Rock records. After a year of touring with the band, he came up with the idea of El Guincho and recorded Alegranza to much acclaim of the media and the fans.
Alegranza is a mix of afro-beat percussion, calypso harmonies, psych tropicália, world music samplers, doo wop, trance repetition, underwater pop, steel drums and island feeling plus club oriented song structures, uptempo beats and exotica production. It was released in the last days of December 2007, went out of print in Spain in less than a month and topped the lists of the most important Spanish music magazines. His popularity is rising to heady heights all around the world with a cult status thanks to constant blog posts and word of mouth.

From The Age newspaper:
Canary Islands mining
El Guincho sidesteps debate by channelling the sounds of his youth, writes Dan Rule.IT’S as if the indie kids finally gave dad’s long-neglected copy of Graceland a spin or three. The past 18 months have seen African music emerge as the indie coterie’s reference point of choice, resulting in a heady brew of fantastically lively records, critical acclaim and equally boisterous accusations of cultural appropriation.
But with his mind-boggling Afro, Calypso and Tropicalia-flavoured debut Alegranza!, Barcelona artist Pablo Diaz-Reixa or “El Guincho” has conveniently sidestepped much of the debate.
It’s with good reason. Born and raised in the Canary Islands, a Spanish colony off the coast of north-west Africa, the affable 24-year-old’s frenetic, multi-accented take on dance music isn’t some exotic flight of fancy. The record is a traversal of his roots.
Diaz-Reixa began mining the various local music of Hawaii, Madagascar, and Trinidad and Tobago, which led him to the sounds of his homeland. Suffice to say, he felt an instant connection and El Guincho was the result.
“It’s funny, I used to really hate Canary Islands music as a kid. To me, it was like old man’s folk music, you know, old guys with huge beards playing guitars and percussion and whatever,” he giggles.
“It’s funny how living in a different city and travelling to all these different places can open your mind to your own home.”
Alegranza! echoes with such sentiments, pitching percussion and tumbling rhythm against a collage of tropical psyche-funk samples, uplifting melodies and pulsing vocal chants. It’s club music with an organic and ethnographic twist, as potently danceable and accessible as it is proudly locative.
But he says it’s the El Guincho show that we should look out for.
“You know, I’d never really seen a video of myself until my friend filmed me at South by Southwest this year,” he says.
“To tell you the truth, it was just really freaky. It’s like I play the sampler and the keyboard with my left hand and then with my right hand the floor tom and a piece of wood. Then I have all these triggers on everything, so all the electronic and the acoustic stuff gets mixed.
“Oh, then I sing, too,” he chuckles. “It all makes me look kind of weird, you know. It’s like, ‘Wow!’ “
From Beat magazine:

El Guincho
If you’re enticed by the idea of an ‘amazonic rave’, than look no further than Pablo Díaz-Reixa and his trusty block of wood. World music has recently been cropping up as a key influence in a wide range of independent music, from MIA to The Ruby Suns, but never has the genre been embraced, deconstructed and delivered with such fervour as it has with the twisted tropicalia of the El Guincho album.
Recent outbreaks of Internet-slaves playing bongos, all hyphy “like Fela” reeks of moneyed putrefaction - at best reminding of C. Thomas Howell’s character in Soul Man, who overdoses on tanning pills in an effort to ‘get down’ with his college basketball team. It’s imperative Alegranza - the debut record from Barcelona’s Pablo Diaz-Reix, aka El Guincho -is not confused with this vapid trend. Newly released in Australia by Mistletone, it’s a genuinely breezy party record that transcends so many re-upped, hackneyed remakes of Tropicalia and Afro-beat’s rhythmic glee.
Every track is a basket of cheers packed with steel drums, sunny instrumental samples and Pablo’s ecstatic chanting in Spanish. Openers ‘Palmitos Park’ and ‘Antillas’ have the jungle-fun feel of The Lion King minus the naff (miraculously), and when, in ‘Fata Morgana’ a rare sample in English declares, “All of the joy of young people in love is conveyed in this delightful and simple melody”, it’s entirely justified. The issue isn’t authenticity - all of Alegranza is sampled anyway - it’s integrity and unforced fun, and El Guincho has it as much as Deelite did, or Kid Creole and the Coconuts.
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Phil | Jan 23, 2008 | Reply
Waaaw! This guy is better than Panda Bear! This guy is going to do something big this year, congrats for this release. I love “alegranza”
xxooxoo
Miguel | Feb 1, 2008 | Reply
No way…
Panda Bear is king!! El Guincho is alright, but it kinda reminds me too much of Panda Bear. Not a rip off, but close.
ac | Feb 2, 2008 | Reply
El Guincho fucking rules!
brendan | Mar 2, 2008 | Reply
which stores can i get this record from in melb?