Troker
Background information
OriginGuadalajara, Jalisco
GenresJazz, psychedelic music
Years active2004–present
LabelsDiscos Intolerancia
Members
  • Frankie Mares
  • Samo Gonzalez
  • Christian Jimenez
  • Chay Flores
  • Diego Franco
  • DJ Sonicko
Websitetroker.com.mx

Troker is a jazz and psychedelic music band from Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico.[1][2]

DownBeat wrote that a 2013 concert performance showed that the band "presented a dynamic update of a sound that the Brecker Brothers started more than 35 years ago."[3] Troker played the Jazzahead festival in Germany in 2015.[4]

The line-up for a 2015 performance in New York was Christian Jiménez (keyboards), Gilberto Cervantes (trumpet), Arturo 'Tiburón' Santillanes (saxophone), Samo González (bass), Frankie Mares (drums), and DJ Zero (turntables).[5] The New York City Jazz Record commented: "At one moment, you think Third-era Soft Machine has been resurrected, then that you've been transported to the Palladium Ballroom and suddenly you're in a '70s cop flick."[5]

Discography

  • Jazz Vinil (2007)[2]
  • El Rey del Camino (2010)[2]
  • Pueblo de Brujos (2012)[2]
  • Crimen Sonoro (2014)[2]
  • 1919 Música para Cine (2016)
  • Imperfecto (2018)[2]

Members

  • Christian Jimenez (keyboards)
  • DJ Sonicko (turntables)
  • Frankie Mares (drums)
  • Isaias Flores (trumpet)
  • Samo Gonzalez (double bass)
  • Diego Franco (saxophone)

Former members

  • Tiburón Santillanes (saxophone)
  • DJ Zero (turntables)
  • Gil Cervantes (trumpet)
  • DJ Rayo (turntables)

References

  1. "'World Music' With A Kick". NPR.org. 20 November 2014. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Troker - virtualWOMEX". womex.com. 2014. Retrieved 30 November 2014.
  3. Cohen, Aaron (December 2013). "Jazz Artists Foster Cultural Connections in Guadalajara". DownBeat. Vol. 80, no. 12. p. 18.
  4. Woodard, Josef (July 2015). "Germany's Jazzahead! Fest Showcases French Artists". DownBeat. Vol. 82, no. 7. p. 18.
  5. 1 2 Henderson, Alex (October 2015). "New York @ Night". The New York City Jazz Record. No. 162. p. 5.
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