Chicha is an indigenous music that was spontaneously created by the culture clash of the '60s when the Indian population of the Peruvian Amazon discovered the Columbian
pop music known as
cumbia and American
rock & roll. As cheap electric instruments became available, Amazon Indians put together dance bands that used the syncopated beat of
cumbia -- which sounds like a laid-back
Latin cousin of
ska -- as the foundation for melodies that sound like Andean
folk tunes, played on electric guitar with lots of effects and
Tex-Mex style Farfisa. When the Indians moved to the city, most notably Lima, they brought their music with them. Like
Afro Peruvian music, chicha was frowned upon by the middle and upper classes, but unlike the music of Afro-Peru, chicha never gained an international following, until now.
Oliver Conan, owner of the Barbes nightclub and record label, discovered the music on a recent trip to Peru. He also discovered that the label that put out a lot of the music had gone bankrupt and many of the master recordings were lost. He finally tracked down six Chicha combos --
los Mirlos,
Juaneco y Su Combo,
los Hijos del Sola,
los Destellos,
los Diablos Rojos and
Eusebio y Su Banjo -- and put together this 17-track compilation. American listeners will be surprised at how familiar the music sounds, with the sprightly garage band meets
Tex-Mex bounce of the organ, the twangy
surf guitar lines, Cuban counter rhythms, and Andean melodies.
Los Destellos name all their compositions after women and show the strongest
Latin/Cuban flavor and the most eclectic approach. They transform
Beethoven's
Fuer Elise into
"Para Elisa" a jaunty track with the melody played on twangy
surf guitar backed by a simple rhythm section of gueira, bongos and bass.
"A Patricia" plays off their guitarist's
psychedelic chops against the bands ever shifting rhythmic accents on timbales, bongos and cowbells.
Los Mirlos were popular in the '70s, and their tunes include
"Sonido Amazonico," a vaguely Arabic melody played on
surf guitar over a stark
cumbia beat;
"El Milagro Verde," with a chiming electric guitar, shimmering, hiccoughing Farfisa and rowdy background vocals, and
"Muchachita del Oriente," which sounds like a Cuban
cowboy song with a Columbian beat.
Juaneco y Su Combo feature a charismatic singer with a gruff, quavering vocal style and asymmetrical, organ-heavy melodies that may be Indian-influenced.
"Ya Se Ha Muerto Mi Abuelo" is one of the album's catchiest tracks with a call and response vocal that recalls
"El Condor Pasa";
"Vacilando con Ayahuesca" has a rhythm that's part
funk, part
ska, but not exactly
cumbia,
rock or
salsa; a panting female vocalist gives the tune a sweaty, sexy vibe.
Los Hijos del Sola have a real
rock & roll vibe, punctuating their tunes with percussive shouts, mad shrieks and rowdy ensemble vocals. Their songs have the strongest Andean influence, although they play the Andean melodies with a
Dick Dale-influenced 32nd note attack.
"Linda Munequita," "Si Me Quieres," and
"Carinito" all jump out at you with their raucous energy and sparkling guitar work. Over-the-top vocals and odd shifts in time and tempo mark the work of
Los Diablos Rojos. Their guitar player drops rippling runs in and around the macho shouts and imprecations of their lead vocalist, who laughs, bellows and growls like a madman on
"El Guapo" and
"Sacalo Sacalo." Eusebio y Su Banjo's single track,
"Mi Morena Rebelde," has a muddy sound, but its distorted guitar and galloping beat make it irresistible. ~ j. poet