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Zemog El Gallo Bueno Flies The Coop. A Puerto Rican Musician Caught Between Motley Crue and the Mambo. The Sound of a Headless Rooster, a Heavy Metal Childhood, and the Puerto Rican JungleAbraham Gomez-Delgadofounder of Zemog, El Gallo Buenofirst had dreams about roosters as a child. Growing up in rural Puerto Rico, he watched his grandfather chop off the head of a rooster followed by the cliché headless frenzy. His grandmother plucked the bird and chopped it open. Upon watching the guts spill out of the rooster, Gomez heaved like never before. It was the first time I saw death up close, remembers Gomez. Soon, his family moved to the U.S. and, by coincidence, lived in a house converted from a chicken coop. From his bedroom he could climb into the attic and see the original coop roof. He began having dreams that he was a rooster that could hover. The first time I woke up believing that it was real. The second time, again I was fooled, says Gomez. Each time I was disappointed when I could not hover. The third time, in my dream I woke up and it was real. So when I really woke up I was thwarted once again.
____________________________________________ The tale comes to life on Zemogs self-titled, debut recording (January 14, 2003 on Aagoo Records). The albums Animate, says, Get ready! Because the rooster is flying on his faith. The song is a plenaa rhythm originating around the time the U.S. invaded Puerto Rico, and which became a musical newspaper for the people. We recorded as if it was outdoors in that era. But in another galaxy. On stage, the band crows like roosters. One player dons a rooster costume. In the spirit of Sun Ra, explains Gomez. Rumba Pala Niñas is Gomez favorite song on the record. Gomez cross-pollinates the rumba by tapping a Van Halen-inspired mozambique beat, a Cuban rhythm which was first introduced to the United States by Eddie Palmieri in the 1960s. Zemogs culture clash is central as the typically male-dominant style provides the foundation for lyrics that say Hey rumbero! The rumba is for the girls. Its for them to play as well! The sound of Zemog, El Gallo Buenowhich is Gomez spelled backwards followed by The Good Rooster in Spanishstarts with Gomezs quirky tastes. I really love roots music from Puerto Rico. Like mountain music and field recordings, says Gomez. Its so raw its like rock and roll. Crazy nasally screaming. The bands repertoire is a direct result of Gomez bicultural experience, his musical past, and the rest of the band members expertise. Crucial to Gomezs musical development was his earlier band, Jayuya, which had similar influences, but was a four-piece rock/salsa band. Zemogs instrumentation is that of a nine-piece salsa band, but lyrically stays close to the rock-n-roll stream of consciousness approach.
____________________________________________ When I came here, there was the culture outside and the culture inside of my house always a big culture clash, explains Gomez. My friends had me listening to Metallica. My sisters were listening to salsa and disco. My brother got me into Kraftwerk. And my dad was listening to Bach and Mozart. I still love it all. I
started bumming out, because we were different and there was a lot
of racism. Id ask, whats wrong with being Puerto Rican?
Why am I fighting everyday in school? Instead of getting down on it,
I started celebrating it. Im not just Puerto Rican and Peruvian.
Im American and I like Motley Crue. I still like the pleasure
of rocking out. I have always been a freak on both sides. So what!
Lets celebrate it and lets laugh about! What became
the foundation for Jayuyas sound, no lives in the big band body
of Zemog, El Gallo Bueno. This website: Copyright © 2003 Dream World Media, LLC. / Urban Mozaik Magazine. All rights reserved. The opinions expressed in Urban Mozaik Magazine are not necessarily those of Urban Mozaik Magazine and the publisher cannot be held responsible for them. This website/publication, in whole or in part, may not be reproduced without written permission from the publisher. |
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