Tag Archives: Travel Tips for Aztlan

Girl in a Coma – Plug Into This!

This interview and audio collage produced by Mark Torres and featuring tracks from Girl in a Coma’s sophomore album “Trio B.C.” originally aired on Travel Tips for Aztlan 90.7FM Los Angeles on July 18th, 2009. Enjoy!

Travel Tips for Aztlan: Radio Reconquistas!

Back in 1999, I didn’t get the whole KPFK radio thing. I was already decidedly left-wing, but knew nothing of the station aside from its Latin Alternative music program “Travel Tips for Aztlan” airing every Saturday night from 10 pm – midnight. Rock en Español was at its peak phase but I still preferred to get my musical fix from the show hosted by Mark Torres on 90.7 FM instead of the trendy programs on radio and TV that would pop up and soon fizzle when the genre began bottoming out commercially.

Fast-forward six years and I found myself working at the station still not fully getting it, but acknowledging to Torres that Travel Tips had been my gateway drug to it! Now, as an occasional guest host and contributor of the show, I’m very happy to see it get its due in a Los Angeles Times piece authored by Reed Johnson in this Sunday’s edition of the paper. Read how every Saturday night, Mark Torres and current cohort Mariluz Gonzalez spend two hours proving to the world that Latin Alternative music from below the border and around the block hasn’t atrophied so there is no reason you should be stuck listening to you old Caifanes albums in mourning!

http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-ca-latinradio24-2009may24,0,4718742.story

Pilarcita @ Mucho Wednesdays!

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The ever talented singer-songwriter Pilar Diaz is starting another residency tonight at Mucho Wednesdays! Promising new songs, the Chilean musician will have Las Cafeteras opening for her in this first performance. Every Wednesday of Diaz’s live residency at the popular downtown Los Angeles club will be themed and tonight is a piñata party! New music, piñatas, and Pilarcita – that’s all you need right there…and then some!

And just for donpalabraz.com readers, the following is a live stripped down performance of “ilegal en estyle” by Diaz on her ukulele accompanied by Gloria Estrada on the guitarron! This and other songs aired as part of Travel Tips for Aztlan’s show last Saturday on KPFK.

Pilar Diaz plays Mucho Wednesdays  (May 20th/ May 27th/ June 3rd) at La Cita 336 S. Hill St. Los Angeles, Ca 90013

Mystery Breakup

Not since my early post on this site about the last show of Los Abandoned, have I had to report music news with such a heavy heart. The experimental, psychedelic, indie-punk outfit Mystery Hangup from Anaheim has called it quits – at least for the time being. The news came in the form of a blog posting on their myspace page which, after telling fans of new directions each member was taking in ’09, didn’t explicitly announce a break up, but made it known anyhow that they won’t be playing shows for a good long while, especially with the following statement:

From the deepest part of our souls we’d like to Thank all of you who have supported us throughout our Mystery Hangup years and to all those who supported us even before Mystery Hangup became Mystery Hangup. Those backyard punk days we will never forget.

I had been worried after the band had pretty much stayed silent after returning home from their West Coast tour last year. As late as December, I asked the lead singer if Mystery Hangup was finished to which she reassured me that they were just taking a break. With my fears now firmly confirmed that such a break will be years – not months,  Orange County and Southern California has, indeed, lost one of its most promising, innovative acts. Despite feeling feverish and weak, I nevertheless made it out to KPFK last night to deliver the news to Travel Tips to Aztlan listeners as I played cuts off their album “Three Moons and the Crashing Sun” as well as a live recording of when they jammed on the show back in April.

Reflecting back, my journey to Mystery Hangup started in 2007 when I heard of this all Latina rock group creating a buzz around Orange County. I had planned to see them during dia de los muertos weekend in Santa Ana at the now defunct SolArt Gallery & Cafe. That show was canceled and it wasn’t until a year ago in February that I finally got to see the band live at the rescheduled performance. Admittedly, I probably had a little too much to drink that night, but was still good enough to take in the experience. After being every bit impressed as I expected to be, I told anyone and everyone about these sisters from Katella High School that rocked hard and sent all my friends youtube links to the band’s music video for “Vista de un Landron,” which had made me an instant fan.

In between that show and the next time I saw them at Hogue Barmichaels in April, I wrote a feature article on Mystery Hangup for the OC Weekly where I compared their sound to the eclectic mixtures of Oaxaca’s mole sauce. Before the piece was published, I also invited the ladies to perform live on Travel Tips for Aztlan. With the West Coast tour kick off show at Hogue’s, I had no inclination whatsoever the short set I checked out that night would be my final time seeing the band rock out live. They had employed the services of bassist Maribel of Telegraph Rd. for the first time and kept her for the remainder of their two week tour which I had hoped resolved the issue of the opening in their lineup following the departure of former member Redd. The ladies would next take to television screens across the U.S. as one of the selected bands to compete in the SiTV series “Jammin.” Having impressed guitarist Dave Navarro, Mystery Hangup unfortunately lost to El Paso’s Low Luster League in the first round. (Which no one I know can make sense of)

It’s in times like these that I realize that I am still spiritually immature. I still have not learned the lesson of William Blake’s poem “Eternity,” which reads: He who binds to himself a joy / Does the winged life destroy / But he who kisses the joy as it flies /Lives in eternity’s sun rise. I still want good things like Mystery Hangup to last forever in defiance of the constant flux that is life. In the end, if I am to begin to assimilate Blake’s wisdom, I’ll start with expressing the gratitude that I do indeed feel for the one year I did enjoy covering Mystery Hangup as a music journalist, radio host, fan and friend:

THANK YOU LADIES!