close
 

First Listen: Rodrigo y Gabriela, 'Area 52'

Audio is not available

close

Purchase Featured Music

  • "Santo Domingo"
  • Album: Area 52
  • Artist: Rodrigo y Gabriela
  • Label: ATO Records
  • Released: 2012
 
Rodrigo y Gabriela's new album, Area 52, comes out Jan. 24.
Enlarge Tina Korhonen/Courtesy of the artist

Rodrigo y Gabriela's new album, Area 52, comes out Jan. 24.

Rodrigo y Gabriela's new album, Area 52, comes out Jan. 24.
Tina Korhonen/Courtesy of the artist

Rodrigo y Gabriela's new album, Area 52, comes out Jan. 24.

text size A A A
January 15, 2012

Audio for this feature is no longer available.

Raised in Mexico, based in Ireland, and not too far removed from life in metal bands — how could Rodrigo y Gabriela not wind up with a sound that splits the difference between jazzy flamenco and heavy rock? On 2006's self-titled album and the 2009 breakout 11:11, fleet-fingered Rodrigo Sanchez and Gabriela Quintero craft their wild instrumental genre fusions using only acoustic guitars, but that changes on Area 52, out Jan. 24. Here, the songs remain the same — the album radically rearranges nine pieces from the pair's past catalog — but the instrumental palette practically explodes.

Recorded mostly in Havana, Area 52 finds Sanchez and Quintero (along with producer Peter Asher and arranger Alex Wilson) reconstructing and building onto their music using the sounds of Cuba — or, more specifically, C.U.B.A., a relentlessly proficient 13-piece Cuban orchestra. Fans of Rodrigo y Gabriela have heard "Hanuman" countless times, but it's practically unrecognizable at times here. You thought the song was epically propulsive before? Try pairing it with the insistent bashing of drums and a massive electric guitar solo worthy of Carlos Santana.

Bold and brassy, these arrangements will no doubt be jarring to purists — and, yes, the band has been around long enough to attract purists. Rodrigo y Gabriela's impeccable guitar runs don't usually compete for attention with horns, pianos, horns, strings, yet more horns and, in an eight-minute take on "Ixtapa," a sitar courtesy of Anoushka Shankar. But, while it refrains from adding new compositions to the duo's catalog, Area 52 travels many steps further: It utterly reconstructs the Rodrigo y Gabriela template, and morphs it into something worldlier, bigger, less formulaic and more surprising. It demonstrates decisively that these songs are sturdy and versatile things, suitable for an endless array of shapes and sizes.

 

More From This Series

Podcast + RSS Feeds

Podcast RSS

  • Music
     
  • First Listen
     
 
 
 

Comments

Discussions for this story are now closed. Please see the Community FAQ for more information.

 

All Songs Considered

Get your skull goblets out: Bob Boilen previews some of the bands at this year's Maryland Deathfest.

It's Gonna Get Sweaty: A Maryland Deathfest Preview

Get your skull goblets out: Bob Boilen previews some of the bands at this year's Maryland Deathfest.

more

NPR thanks our sponsors

Become an NPR Sponsor

Pre-Order The Album

More NPR Music

Pianist and composer Kurt Ellenberger urges musicians to "make money doing something else."

'It Can't Be Done': The Difficulty Of Growing A Jazz Audience

Pianist and composer Kurt Ellenberger urges musicians to "make money doing something else."

An online firestorm between the Met Opera, music critics and fans triggers crucial questions.

An Online Debate Of Operatic Intensity: The Met And Its Critics

An online firestorm between the Met Opera, music critics and fans triggers crucial questions.

Sufjan Stevens, Son Lux and Serengeti collaborate on a sometimes humorous but mostly beautiful EP.

By This 'Beak And Claw,' A Trio Shall Synthesize

Sufjan Stevens, Son Lux and Serengeti collaborate on a sometimes humorous but mostly beautiful EP.

The pianist's new album features etudes written by the Hungarian composer Gyorgy Ligeti.

Jeremy Denk: Playing Ligeti With A Dash Of Humor

The pianist's new album features etudes written by the Hungarian composer Gyorgy Ligeti.

more