Desolat’s Guti releases debut album – ‘Patio de Juegos’ | xltronic messageboard
 
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Desolat’s Guti releases debut album – ‘Patio de Juegos’
 

offline BVDM on 2011-03-28 17:43 [#02409680]
Points: 2 Status: Lurker



[IMG]http://i969.photobucket.com/albums/ae174/beatnikben/Gu
ti_front_forum.jpg[/IMG]

[b][i]Following a constant stream of well received
productions, Desolat’s rising star Guti releases his
exciting first album on his parent label. [/b][/i]

Argentinean-born Guti releases his inaugural album on the
label that has given his echoingly hypnotic jazz-infused
house music a stable platform over the past 18 months. The
live performer effortlessly presents a collection of
beautifully constructed productions that demonstrate the
convergence and symbiotic nature of his musical past, and
present.

Classically-trained jazz virtuoso and national rock ‘n’
roll hero in his native Argentina, Guti is no stranger to
music. A musical education that takes in Argentinean folk,
blues, rock and jazz, Guti is currently enjoying a new
chapter in his musical adventure within electronica. From
the moment his track with Damian Schwarz on Frankfurt label
‘Raum…Musik’ was licensed by Loco Dice for his
compilation The Lab, it was obvious Guti’s decision to
explore house music was a positive step.
With his productions now being a regular feature in the
record bags of DJs as diverse as Loco Dice, Seth Troxler,
Marco Carola, and Carl Cox, it is apparent Guti is enjoying
a watershed moment in his long adventure.

‘Patio de Juegos’, which translates as ‘Playground’,
is a wonderful multi-genre journey through the mind of an
artist who is both on top of his game, and on the rise
towards the stars. Lashings of his ever-present South
American heritage infuse with incredibly intricate and
perfectly simple house structures that give the whole album
it’s almost ‘child at play’ ethos that is rarely found
in electronic music.

Future club hits such as ‘Wanna Be’, with its nod to the
historical upbeat lineage of house music, and ‘All the
Girls’, with its chugging rhythm, trickling piano loops
and erotic vocals sit effortlessly alongside more
experimental and jazz inspired tracks such as the
explorative ‘Still here’. Another fine example is
‘Sun’,


 


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