Havoc "Espiritu" (p)2020 Subterfuge
When the world has turned its face to trap, raggaeton and loose post-everything experimentation it became visibly harder to sustain the noticeable career in guitar-driven rock music. Thus, a swarm of indie rock bands started to abandon guitar-oriented sound in favor of digitalized cross-pop genre-bending – whether in pursue of zeitgeist or out of the fear of being swept away by the relentless march of time. “Espiritu” is the physical (yet not released physically until now) evidence of one simple postulate: you don't have to change your way if you know well where you're going to. It's got the perfect production (Yon Vidaur, the guitar of the band, was also at the helm), the album sounds impeccably clean but never over-polished. It's got great songs. When a song needs some harsh guitars – it’s got them. It sounds so fresh that you don’t have to link it with the previous decades to find its roots in the past. This is the newborn child of this particular moment.
I have never listened (I don't know why, really) to english-speaking releases by PLV Havoc, the previous avatar of Pedro Gracia Perez de Vinaspre. But speaking of his shorter named vehicle, the gradual ascent is apparent: every consecutive album is better than its predecessor - and man, we are talking of progression that started with the fabulous "Lo Saben Los Narvales"!
I have never listened (I don't know why, really) to english-speaking releases by PLV Havoc, the previous avatar of Pedro Gracia Perez de Vinaspre. But speaking of his shorter named vehicle, the gradual ascent is apparent: every consecutive album is better than its predecessor - and man, we are talking of progression that started with the fabulous "Lo Saben Los Narvales"!
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