Latest Release
- 4 NOV 2023
- 1 Song
- El Diablito · 1990
- Inés - Single · 2023
- Sólo Eres Tú - Single · 2022
- Heridos - Single · 2019
- Sonando · 2009
- El Nervio del Volcán · 1994
- El Nervio del Volcán · 1994
- El Nervio del Volcán · 1994
- El Nervio del Volcán · 1994
- El Nervio del Volcán · 1994
Essential Albums
- A cross between The Cure-leaning darkwave and dissonant dance-pop, Caifanes’ 1994 <I>El Nervio del Volcán</I> is theatrically gothic, with occult-inflected lyrics and eccentric guitar licks. While this would be the last Caifanes album with frontman Saúl Hernández and guitarist Alejandro Marcóvich playing as a unit, their performance chemistry was indeed unmatched: Hernandez's undulating wailing against Marcóvich’s moody and unpredictable fretwork is a stroke of syncopated genius—check the alternating time signatures of the guitar riffs and vocals of “Afuera” and “Aquí No Es Así”.
- Mexico City's Caifanes exploded onto the rock en español scene with this self-titled debut steeped in British rock influences and Latin American folklore. On it, they catapult cumbia into the future with "La Negra Tomasa", refashioning the traditional genre with chilly New Wave production; their fondness for The Cure comes to the fore on the goth-leaning "Cuentame Tu Vida". Their secret weapons throughout are Alejandro Marcovich's echoing guitar and Saúl Hernández's haunting wail, which create a combustible combination—radical for its time and spine-tingling even now.
Albums
- 1992
- 1990
Singles & EPs
About Caifanes
Caifanes are the quintessential Mexican rock band. In many ways, they were the group that brought rock music out of obscurity in their home country and propelled it to the masses, packing stadiums and large auditoriums with classic anthems like “Viento” (1988) and “Afuera” (1994). Named after the classic 1967 Mexican film Los caifanes, the group was formed by lead singer Saúl Hernández in the late ‘80s as an offshoot of Las Insólitas Imágenes de Aurora. Their early look, showcased on the album cover of their 1988 self-titled debut, borrowed heavily from gothic rock of the era (most notably The Cure). Yet by their second album, El Diablito (1990), the group was delving head-on into folklore and mysticism in songs like “Los Dioses Ocultos” and “La Célula Que Explota”, the latter of which fused elements of mariachi with rock, foreshadowing the band’s future sound and aesthetic. It was their third album El Silencio (1992)––produced by Adrian Belew, who worked with legendary acts like David Bowie and Talking Heads––that would catapult them to international stardom with memorable songs like “Nubes” and “No Dejes Que…”. Though the group would only release one more album before dissolving, El Nervio del Volcán (1994), their legacy lived on through their spiritual successor group Jaguares.
- FROM
- Mexico City, Mexico
- FORMED
- January 1987
- GENRE
- Alternative and Latin Rock