Rodrigo y Gabriela give LA the emotional reset it needs while taking fans at the Hollywood Bowl on a riveting, philosophical journey

Rodrigo y GabrielaPhotos by Carla Lopez // Written by Iván Fernández //

Rodrigo y Gabriela with Afro-Cuban All Stars //
Hollywood Bowl – Los Angeles
September 18th, 2024 //

It hadn’t been two weeks since LA found itself in near-literal hell when Rodrigo y Gabriela returned to the Hollywood Bowl. The city found itself surrounded by wildfires to the north, east and south and crunched with inescapable record-breaking, triple-digit temperatures.

With the heatwave gone and the fires mostly contained, the people needed a fresh start. The Mexican duo were more than happy to oblige with an assist from the Afro-Cuban All-Stars.

The beauty of the Hollywood Bowl is how it can feel immense without losing its intimacy, especially in the hands of seasoned performers. Thankfully, this was the case with the night’s acts: two experienced veterans with many performances at the Bowl in their pocket. It also takes something special to be the type of performer who is invited to the Bowl multiple times in their career — “maybe eight times” said Rodrigo during the concert — and both bands showed everyone what that special something is.

The show began with the Afro-Cuban All-Stars led by founder Juan De Marcos González, who also happens to be the guy who helped Ry Cooder put Buena Vista Social Club together during the same year he also founded the All-Stars. To say he has an eye and an ear for talent is like saying Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani knows how to hit a baseball or steal a base. As a longtime of Buena Vista, seeing one of its founders perform live sent chills through my body.

González and the 12 members who comprised this version of the All-Stars had the crowd cheering, hollering and dancing throughout their too-brief, five-song set. They opened with “Addimu A Oshun” as they have for years. Their version of the invocation to the saint of Cuba is also an invocation to get off your seat and dance, after all.

Afro-Cuban All-Stars

Afro-Cuban All-Stars

The vibes continued through their set filled with jaw-dropping instrumental solos, including the conga solo on the closing song, which had people dancing in conga lines in every section of the venue. Did I mention that this was just the opener?!

So how does a two-person, guitar-only group take the stage after that type of performance?

Easily, if you are Rodrigo y Gabriela! The duo comprised of Rodrigo Sánchez and Gabriela Quintero walked out confidently and immediately got to work with two songs from their latest album In Between Thoughts…A New World. The album’s cover art served as a backdrop that set the scene for the emotional and philosophical musical journey ahead.

As a longtime fan, I was happily surprised with the shift in their music as Rodrigo spent most of the night playing an electric guitar. As other longtime fans know, Rod & Gab performed on acoustic guitars for the majority of their career. In fact, they were still an acoustic act when last I saw them at the Bowl in 2016.

That changed in 2019 with the release of Mettavolution when they sparingly added electric guitars into the mix before fully incorporating them into the recorded and live performances of 2023’s In Between Thoughts…A New World. The change didn’t alter Rodrigo y Gabriela’s music into an unrecognizable form nor did it feel like an experiment tacked on out of curiosity. Just as they have expanded their own philosophical beliefs into their lives and their recent albums, so too has the electric guitar expanded the range and style of their recorded music and live performances.

Rodrigo y Gabriela

Rodrigo y Gabriela

The duo surprised everyone at the Bowl by performing four new songs. “Some bands don’t like to play songs from their new album, but we frankly don’t give a fuck,” said Rodrigo to cheers from the audience.

Of the four new songs, “The Simurgh” stood out the most to me. The song, as Gabriela explained, is based on a poem called “The Conference of the Birds” by Sufi poet Attar and is written as a narrative soundtrack, or companion, to the journey taken by the birds in the poem. The song included a guitar solo by Rodrigo that was so impacting one could feel and see the poem come to life.

Rod & Gab went back to their fully acoustic roots halfway through their set for a trio of older hits: “Hanuman”, “Diablo Rojo” and “Tamacun”. They even performed them in the manner like they used to when they first began performing together, sitting next to each other on stools as close to the audience as possible.

Rodrigo left the stage at one point, leaving Gabriela to regale the crowd with a solo on acoustic guitar for a few minutes. It was a master class in guitar artistry. Rodrigo eventually joined her as she continued playing until the two met, musically, segueing into “Finding Myself Leads Me to You”.

Rodrigo y Gabriela closed out the show with an amazing rendition of their most recent album’s title track that had everyone on their feet. The concert was a joyous ceremony from beginning to end and a much-needed emotional reset from the oppressive, heat-related dangers of the past weeks.

RODRIGO Y GABRIELA

Setlist:
True Nature
The Ride of the Mind
Astrum in Corpore
Egoland
Seeking Unreality
Monster
Hanuman
Diablo Rojo
Tamacun
The Simurgh
Gabriela Solo
Finding Myself Leads Me to You
Dublin
Descending to Nowhere

Encore:
In Between Thoughts…A New World

AFRO-CUBAN ALL-STARS

Setlist:
Addimu A Oshún
A Distancia
Sueño Y Realidad
On the Road Again
Conga

Día y Noche de Los Muertos returns to Hollywood Forever, creating a cathartic experience with Ed Maverick, Hermanos Gutiérrez & more

Día y Noche de Los Muertos 2022By Iván Fernández //

Día y Noche de Los Muertos featuring Ed Maverick, Hermanos Gutiérrez, Son Rompe Pera, Thee Sacred Souls //
Hollywood Forever Cemetery – Los Angeles
October 29th, 2022 //

Typically, there’d be cause for serious concern when thousands of people congregate in a cemetery on a Saturday. The last thing we need in our not-quite-post-pandemic world is a mass gathering of a demonic cult or an apocalyptic scenario previously only imagined by the likes of the creators of the “Doom” video game franchise.

However, when the reason turns out to be the 23rd annual Día y Noche de Los Muertos event at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery in LA, the main concern is searching for a place to sit to eat between performances. The festival is one of the largest Day of the Dead-related events in the world outside of Mexico and Latin America. Attendees over the years have been regaled with impressive lineups of Mexican and Latin American artists along with the dozens of altars built by community members in honor of their departed loved ones.

For many years, the event at Hollywood Forever and the Día de los Muertos event at Self-Help Graphics on the other side of the county were the only large-scale celebrations of the cultural holiday in LA. In our post-“Coco” and “The Book of Life” world, they are national torchbearers for a region with the largest Latin American diaspora in the country.

The festival’s first edition in 1999 was a small affair featuring some live music, a couple of altars and roughly 300 people. At its peak about six to seven years ago, 40,000 people were dancing along near the memorial and burial sites of celebrities (one half of the original Ramones lineup, Johnny and Dee Dee, are laid to rest here along with Mel Blanc, Mickey Rooney, Burt Reynolds, Jonathan Gold, the DeMilles, the Chaplins, etc.) and non-celebs alike, some who were laid to rest in the late 19th century. Since 2021, the festival has pulled a Coachella of sorts and split into two separate events at the same location: a daytime cultural event dedicated to families and kids to learn about the history and specific cultural practices of Day of the Dead followed by a nighttime event featuring three stages of live music.

The 2022 edition welcomed over 20,000 people to the cemetery grounds for a day of music and remembrance. This year’s theme was dedicated to Mayahuel, the Aztec goddess of fertility and maguey (agave), the plant where pulque, mezcal and tequila are derived from. There’s a tragic backstory about the romance between Mayahuel and Quetzalcoatl, the feathered serpent, that ends in her death. His tears fall on her grave and create the agave plant, “producing pulque and mezcal to forever lesson our miseries and lift our grief,” to quote the event’s press release.

Día y Noche de Los Muertos 2022 - Thee Sacred Souls


Thee Sacred Souls

There was certainly something of that in the air this year. Though it was still a fun celebration of life, perhaps the weight of these past two years has made people’s sentiments heavier. You could see it in the elaborate altars placed along the pathways from the cemetery to stages and art exhibits.

Everywhere you looked, there was an old portrait of a married couple as well as photos of an infant, boys, girls and teens whose lives were all tragically cut short. The beauty in the Day of the Dead event is how these portraits are also adorned with items that reflected the warmth of their lives, however short or long. Creating an altar takes time and an emotional effort by their builders that helps them confront their grief. There may not have been much pulque or mezcal on the grounds, but the miseries of recent times were certainly lessened through these public displays of grief and love.

The performers for the night also did a wonderful job of bringing people together and lessening their miseries while lifting their grief. The night began with San Diego’s Thee Sacred Souls. The trio of singer Josh Lane, drummer Alex Garcia and bassist Sal Samano have seen their star rise quickly over the past year-and-a-half thanks to a combination of Lane’s Marvin Gaye-esque vocal styles and their mesmerizing take on Chicano soul and R&B.

Día y Noche de Los Muertos 2022 - Son Rompe Pera


Son Rompe Pera

Thee Sacred Souls were joined onstage with a pair of backup singers, a guitarist and a pianist/organ player to fill out their sound. Though the trio has just one full-length album to its name so far, songs such as “Can I Call You Rose?”, “Weak For Your Love” and “Love Comes Easy” have become instantly recognizable by the band’s growing legion of fans. Tears flowed, kisses were planted and lovers hugged as the band gracefully swung from one love balled to the next.

Son Rompe Pera, on the other hand, were the exact opposite. If you’re ever curious as to what a combination of cumbia and marimba music from Mexico’s southeastern coast sounds like when fused with the ethos and energy of hardcore punk, then you must make it your mission to watch these guys live.

At the heart of Son Rompe Pera’s sound is not an accordion, a guitar or a drum, but the graceful xylophone! Never have I seen so many people lose their minds over watching a guy who looks like Edward Munson’s Mexican twin rocking out on a minutes-long xylophone solo. Never have I also seen a mosh pit start thanks to a xylophone solo, and even less have I ever encountered a mosh pit where a man felt comfortable enough to run circles in it with his very young daughter cheering him on while riding on his shoulders.

Día y Noche de Los Muertos 2022 - Hermanos Gutiérrez


Hermanos Gutiérrez

The Mexico City outfit from the town of Naucalpan is also an example of how to restructure your recorded music for a live setting. Songs such as “Calculadora” and “Tortuga del Arenal” have a danceable, yet mellow rhythm to it on the album. When played live though, the songs take on a faster rhythm, with the marimba and cumbia accents ceding ground to the group’s punk vibe.

This is where I question the order of the artists on the lineup. Hermanos Gutiérrez went up next and played beautifully. Brothers Alejandro and Estevan Gutiérrez are two talented musicians who play guitar together, swapping between acoustic, electric and slide guitars during their shows. The Zurich-based duo’s instrumental music swept me away, carrying me into a mystical world soundtracked by their cinematic, western style.

Unfortunately, some in the crowd were still riding the high from Son Rompe Pera and jarred by the switch in energy and music, prompting me to wonder if it would have been better if Hermanos Gutiérrez performed before Son Rompe Pera. It’s a shame really, but it was wonderful to hear songs from their latest album El Bueno Y El Malo (The Good And The Bad), which they recorded with Dan Auerbach and released on The Black Keys frontman’s record label Easy Eye Sound, along with a few older cuts. There was something about listening to title track, “Tres Hermanos” and “Hermosa Drive” live in a cemetery that added to the experience and aura of the night’s festivities that no other performer had.

Día y Noche de Los Muertos 2022 - Ed Maverick


Ed Maverick

The evening’s headliner Ed Maverick was a smart choice to close things out. I knew the fest had taken a somber and introspective turn when the promoters announced him to lead the lineup. In fact, the “Sad Boy Supreme” of Chihuahua, Mexico, was stopping through LA on his first-ever world tour — and he did not disappoint.

Even from a distance, it’s easy to tell that his sad-boy schtick isn’t a performance but who he truly is. It also shouldn’t be a surprise considering he titled one of his albums Mix Pa’ Llorar en Tu Cuarto (A Mix to Cry in Your Bedroom). And yes, he performed his sad-boy anthems, but he and his band gave the songs an aura that matched the grief-lifting vibes of the night.

Maverick and his band adapted other songs from Mix and his 2021 LP Eduardo to give them a larger presence live. “Hola, ¿cómo estás?,” for example, filled the event like an anthem meant for a stadium as opposed to the recorded version’s floating, atmospheric vibes. Meanwhile, “Fuentes de Ortiz”, “Acurrucar” and “Quiero” became cathartic sing-alongs for thousands of fans in attendance.

Maverick didn’t have too much to say between songs and let his music do most of the talking. However, when he did speak to the crowd, he had to pause with a smile and wait for the lull between screaming and cheering fans to be heard. He ended the night with a lengthy guitar solo that cemented his newfound status as a rock star and new king of the sad boys.

Whatever grief guests carried with them into the event, they certainly left feeling weightless after a long, fun and most importantly, cathartic experience.