Mœnia
Mœnia | |
---|---|
Mœnia performing, 2007. Alex Midi (centre left) and Alfonso Pichardo (centre right). | |
Background information | |
Origin | Mexico City, Mexico |
Genres |
Electronica Synthpop Indie pop |
Years active |
1985–1990 (as 5mentarios) 1991–present (as Mœnia) |
Labels | EMI Music |
Website | http://www.moenia.com/ |
Members |
Alfonso Pichardo Jorge Soto Alejandro 'Midi' Ortega |
Past members | Juan Carlos Lozano |
Mœnia is a Mexican electronica/synthpop/ambient group. Popular within the Latin club scene while simultaneously pioneering a darker, more experimental, more poetic side of Spanish-language electronica, Mœnia has had three top-20 hits. Along with Aleks Syntek, Mœnia is often considered one of the first successful experimental Mexican music composers and performers, finding commercial viability in a market normally dominated by Latin ballad crooners, teenage vocal groups and musical styles with more mass appeal like cumbia and ranchera. Mœnia is also popular in other parts of Latin America, including the Argentinian and Chilean music markets, where they have also charted. Some of their most recognized singles include "Estabas Ahí," "No Dices Más" and "Manto Estelar".
History
Early years (1985-1990)
The group's formation dates back to 1985 while attending junior high school. The project began when sophomore year student Juan Carlos Lozano along with Alfonso Pichardo and Jorge Soto shared various musical tastes such as punk and New wave. At the same time in this era Spanish language rock music was also having a tremendous impact on Latin American listeners. Their musical influences include New Order, Erasure, OMD, The Cure, Depeche Mode and The Sisters of Mercy. Later on in their high school years the trio would compete in school organized talent shows, played live sets in small nightclubs throughout Mexico City and even recorded few demos. It was during this time when the three had a very clear vision of what they intended to do in the music scene. The band's first moniker was that of ' 5mentarios ', its line up originally consisted of Alfonso Pichardo as lead vocalist, Juan Carlos Lozano as lead guitarist, Jorge Soto on keyboards, Abraham Rodríguez on synthesizers and Carlos Mercado on drums. Rodríguez abandoned 5mentarios in mid 1990. Alejandro Ortega (Alex Midi), a self-taught musician on guitar and synthesizers joins the band in early 1991 soon after finishing college.
Setbacks and later success, Mœnia (1991-1998)
In 1991, the group scored a contract with PolyGram and recorded a self-titled 'debut' the following year. With very few copies released, the album included an early but darker sounding version of "Color melancolía" (which was re-recorded in the 1996 edition), however it did not meet significant expectation and was immediately considered a commercial failure. The failed album is considered by many longtime fans as a precursor in how it would characterize Moenia's sound in the years that followed. After that album's failed attempt, In 1993 Pichardo steps down from the band as he decided to complete his Master's degree in the United States, the situation forced Lozano to take over as vocalist and eventually in 1996 and after several attempts they receive a new opportunity under Universal Music to record their official debut Mœnia, the debut album featured hits like "No puedo estar sin ti" and "Estabas ahí" (becoming club scene hymns) followed by a remix compilation album Mœnia Mixes. Much of the lyrical content in Moenia's 1996 debut were composed by Pichardo and yet were vocalized by Lozano. A similar situation happens with Adición+ (1999) when much of its lyrical content was composed by Lozano and later vocalized by Pichardo upon his return to Moenia.
Post Lozano era - Adición+, Le Modulor, Televisor (1998-2003)
Juan Carlos exits Moenia in late 1998 after an extensive tour and moved on to form the still electronically oriented but more guitar-centered Morbo, despite the acclaimed success of 1996's Mœnia and its subsequent album of remixes (a risky and previously unheard of novelty in the Mexican music industry), Pichardo returned with the remaining two of his former bandmates to complete Mœnia's line-up, which has remained unchanged since 1999. Moenia's second album Adición+ featured hits like "No Dices Más" and "Regreso a Casa". Their third album Le Modulor (2001) featured tracks like "Molde Perfecto" but unfortunately Le Modulor did not have the same impact on listeners like the two previous albums did. 2003 saw the release of their third album Televisor which featured the smash singles "¿En qué momento?" and "Tú sabes lo que quiero". The music video for "Tú sabes lo que quiero" stirred controversy at the time due to its racy sexualized themes causing several music video networks to stop airing the piece.
Stereo Hits, HitsLive (2004-2005)
Stereo Hits is by far Mœnia's highest-selling album to date. It is a series of successful 1980s and 1990s Latin pop/rock and ballad hit covers such as "En Algún Lugar" by Duncan Dhu, "Tren Al Sur" by Los Prisioneros, "Beber de Tu Sangre" by Los Amantes de Lola, "Mátenme Porque Me Muero" by Caifanes and "Ni Tú Ni Nadie" by Alaska y Dinarama. The album was originally intended to serve as a stopgap to keep fans happy while the group worked on their next album, but became so popular that it was soon followed by a tour, which in turn was followed by a live album of its own in 2005, HitsLive. HitsLive was recorded live in Mexico City's National Auditorium. This compilation features Moenia's early hits up to the Stereo Hits era.
Solar (2006-2007)
In 2006 Mœnia released a new album, named "Solar", which follows a more 1980s electropop style, including more electric guitar sounds. Also includes a duet with Denisse Guerrero (of Belanova) called "Me Equivoque".
En Electrico (2009)
Pichardo had started a solo project entitled Equivocal, with the first single "Dar la Vuelta".[1] In November 2009 a compilation album entitled "En Electrico" was released. Produced by Armando Avila, featuring notable guests such as Paco Huidobro (Fobia), María José and former fellow frontman/vocalist Juan Carlos Lozano.
FM (2012)
October 30, 2012 saw the release of their seventh studio album "FM", with their first single "Morir Tres Veces" (Die Thrice). An FM APP was released in December which featured the song "Eso Que Paso" (That Which Happened). Two other singles from FM include "Mejor Ya No" (Better Not) and "Soy Lo Peor" (I'm Worse).
Fantom (2016)
Moenia release their eighth official studio recording titled "Fantom" on September 23, 2016.
Members
- Alfonso Pichardo - Vocal & Keyboardist (Co-Founder / 1985–1993 & 1998 – present day)
- Jorge Soto – Keyboards & Guitar (Co-Founder / 1985–present day)
- Alejandro "Alex Midi" Ortega – Synth & programming (1991–present day)
Former members
- Juan Carlos Lozano - Lead guitarist, vocalist (Co-Founder / 1985–1995) & singer (1995–1998)
- Abraham Rodríguez - Synth & programming (1986-1990)
- Carlos Mercado - Drums (1985–93)
Trivia
- Mœnia famously covered José José's 1978's hit "Volcán" from the album Volcán: Tributo a José José, which received a lot of airplay in Mexican radio.
- Mœnia also did a track "Lado Animal" for the movie Amores Perros which actually was not featured in the movie, but only on the soundtracks second CD.
- They've also covered the Soda Stereo song "Zoom", the song "Huellas en la Bajamar" by Hombres G and covered the José Alfredo Jiménez song "Amanecí en tus brazos"
- They've also covered the Caifanes song "Mátenme Porque me Muero". Later on scoring another chart topper with "Juegos de Amor", a song that in 1988 was made popular by Neón. Both of these are included in their Stereo Hits album.
- In 2012, their track " La Ecuación '1984' " sampled the 1983 Animotion hit "Obsession".
- In 2015, Moenia released the single " Jamás! ", this single curiously samples the 1987 Timbiriche hit "No seas tan cruel". Eventually being included as part of the concept for the 2016 album Fantom.
Discography
- Mœnia - Disco Perdido, 1992 (Debut LP, out of print)
- Mœnia, 1996
- Adición+, 1999
- Le Modulor, 2001 (Out of print and only available as a digital download)
- Televisor, 2003
- Stereo Hits, 2004
- Solar, 2006
- FM, 2012
- Fantom, 2016
Compilations
- Mœnia Mixes, 1998
- Éxitos, 2001
- Hits Live, 2005
- En Electrico, 2009
Singles
Mœnia (1996)
- No puedo estar sin ti
- Déjame entrar
- Color melancolía * (Re-recorded from their 1992 debut LP)
- Estabas ahí
- No importa que el sol se muera
Adicion + (1999)
- Manto estelar
- No dices más
- Regreso a casa
Le Modulor (2001)
- Molde perfecto
- Llegaste a mí
- Como ves tú
Televisor (2003)
- ¿En qué momento?
- Tú sabes lo que quiero
- Espirales
Stereo Hits (2004)
- Ni tú ni nadie (featuring sample of "Rock and Roll Part 2 (1972) by Gary Glitter)
- Juegos de Amor
Hits Live (2005)
- No dices más (Live)
Solar (2006)
- Lo que tú digas
- Sufre conmigo.
- Me equivoqué (ft Denisse Guerrero).
En Electrico (2010)
- Contigo Estare (ft. Juan Carlos Lozano).
- No Importa que el sol se muera (ft. Maria Jose).
- En ti.
FM (2012)
- Morir Tres Veces.
- Eso Que Pasó
- Mejor Ya No
- Soy Lo Peor
Fantom (2016)
- Prohibido Besar (feat. María León)
- Jamás !
- Me Liberé