Mutant Core Resistance interview

The Argentinian band Mutant Core Resistance and their label Mutant Core Records are breathing some fresh air both into their local as well as the wider global *core underground. They are fusing subgenres like psycore, breakcore, speedcore and extratone into new experimental soundscapes and something called “atmo tone”. In this interview we talked about their music and the scene in Argentina.

Who are the crew behind the Mutant Core Records and how did it start?

Mutant Core Resistance

We have different types of members in the crew. Some of them are more freelance like our brother from Poland, Si.rAk-Sa, or brothers from our country like Morphoaega, Chamal, Fuel & Fire and Charlie. They all contribute in their own way and support this music we promote on our label. Then there are the core members of MCR: Solarkae, Unfriendly bit and Beatcrusher. MCR started in 2015 as a group of 3 DJs: Trip Cris, Low Noise and Beatcrusher. They met at free parties that were organized in different parts of Buenos Aires in the years of 2010-2012. After some years of playing on their own they decided to unite and form a crew dedicated to genres like breakcore, terrorcore, speedcore and extratone.

Tell us more about the Mutant Core Resistance band..

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The main concept of the band is to experiment and deconstruct. We try to merge our 3 energies into the tracks we do. The main intention is to create soundscapes that take the listeners to different places, sensations and feelings, sometimes in a good musical “trip” and sometimes we try to take them out of the comfort zone. All the songs are created with computer and synths. We like the analog sound, but we also like to do the sound designs, the mix and mastering in the DAW.

What are your musical influences?

There are a wide variety of musical influences: Pierre Schaeffer and the concrete music, John Cage and the aleatory music, Fluxus, John Coltrane and his album Om, Alice Coltrane, rock of the 60’s and 70’s like 5th dimention, Guru Guru, Jefferson Airplane, Iron Butterfly, Focus and Pink Floyd. Also electronic music like Kraftwerk, hardcore jungle from the 90s, Autechre, Aphex Twin, Squarepusher, The Flashbulb and Richard Devine. We also like more traditional music like Chinese music, Indian Classical music, Tuvan singing and different mantras from Buddhism and Hinduism.

What is atmo tone?

We feel that atmo tone is somewhere in between soundscapes and extratone. Atmospheric extratone is a physical phenomena (the sum of the harmonics of deep kicks) it is also music that promotes introspection combined with altered states of consciousness induced by the music.

There seems to be lots of experimental psycore coming from South-America and you guys are also involved in events, such as La CAJA DEL ODIO, that combine experimental *core music and psytrance as well as other styles. Is there a lot of collaboration between experimental electronic music subcultures in your local scene?

There are just a few people dedicated to this particular spectrum of experimental music, so we are always in touch, we need to combine our forces in order to do events and gather some public. There are a few sporadic events like the one you mentioned, also we used to do one called Speedfest and raves with different names.

How are your local hardcore techno, breakcore and psycore party scenes in general?

The scene is very small and underground, the music you mentioned arrived in our country in the early 2000 and became more listened arround 2012. Nowadays the younger generations are paying more attention to this music and new dj’s and producers are starting to appear and we are glad for that.

What are the possibilities and challenges in organizing parties in Argentina?

Argentina is a big country, so it depends on where you are. Here in our province (Buenos Aires) there are a bunch of small places for this kind of events, but you have to take your soundsystem if you want to sound decent. The other option is to move away from the city and do the events outdoors if you know a place to occupy for the night or maybe if you know somebody who owns a place. The problem is the public transport, sometimes it’s not easy to reach certain places. The police is also a big problem, they are always trying to shut our raves, because we are “against the law”.

What are your plans for the future?

Mutant Core Resistance live session.

In terms of music, we are working on a couple of collaborations with different brothers from other countries and we are working on our second LP. There are a few EP’s from some artists from our country and from other countries that will be released soon. We are thinking about doing some gigs in a couple of places in Europe. Some crews are inviting us to play lately, but we have to raise the money for the plane tickets and they are pretty expensive!

 

 

Which core artists from Argentina would you recommend for the readers to check out?

Our scene is small, but it has a very colorful variety of artists. Here are some:

Trip’s Cris
https://soundcloud.com/dj-trips-cris

Fuel & Fire
https://soundcloud.com/naftafuel

Dj Dmøncøre
https://www.facebook.com/DjDmoncore
https://diegoseta.wixsite.com/dmoncore

Charlie
https://www.facebook.com/CharlieDMB

M0710n
https://www.facebook.com/k33p1nm0710n

Nymh4l
https://www.facebook.com/Nymh4ldj

Killer drumz
https://www.facebook.com/killerdrumz

KRAKTAX
https://soundcloud.com/kraktaxxxcore

SpeedB
https://soundcloud.com/augustin-kutralrecords

Rrayen
https://soundcloud.com/rrayen

Round Wave Crusher
https://www.facebook.com/roundwavecrusher

Thanks for the interview!

Thank you, thanks to The Hard Data and the readers!

Check out MCR here:

Bandcamp – https://mutantcorerecords.bandcamp.com

Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/mutantcoreargentina

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