Hector Buitrago's Conector a Soundtrack in Search of a Movie Cool Enough to Fit It
Innovative Colombian/global Groove
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Colombian former metal guitarist Hector Buitrago has a sensitive side - probably dozens of them. He and his collaborators are alive to the possibilities of bridging diverse styles such as Colombian alternative/popular music and Tibetan chants, and it's not very clear where one begins and the other ends. His debut album "Conector" is a carefully composed and sentimental album that, unlike so much music today, works from start to finish. It's not a single with a bunch of outtakes taking up space. In fact, my mind has been haunted by the thought that there must be a movie out there, or waiting to be made, that will be worthy of this album as a soundtrack. Oddly, I was slow to like this album. I had heard the superficially happy "Altisimo" on internet radio and liked it enough to buy the album for my wife. She left it out one day, and I borrowed it. I guess I must have bought it for myself, because I immediately repeated the song a dozen times. And at first, only that one song. The lyrics of "Altisimo" still escape my ear - it's very ethereal and catchy - but it seems to refer to the high Andean cities and ruins, with the refrain "altisimo, blanquisimo" (so high, so white). I'm enjoying the mystery of it for now, but eventually I'll have to know just what the lyrics are about.
Eventually, I explored beyond the song that hooked me and was moved by the swells and shimmies of the uncategorical "Durgamaloka," which incorporates a jagged string section intro, Buddhist chants, and a sort of mournful, wavelike progression of strings that leaves me staring into space, completely transported. This one seems like it's custom-made for scenery of heartbreaking beauty or cinematic footage of dreadful loss, inner turmoil, and an eventual, faint glimpse of hope.
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Takeaways
- strongly recommended
- innovative world music
- successful blend of styles
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