Round 6:
Which COVER do you like better?
Avenger (Totimoshi)
The Fat of the Land (The Prodigy)
Remember you're voting for the cover artwork NOT the musical content or artist!
seen from South Korea

seen from Malaysia
seen from Russia
seen from Malaysia

seen from United Kingdom
seen from South Korea
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Russia

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Ukraine
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from Netherlands
seen from United Kingdom
Round 6:
Which COVER do you like better?
Avenger (Totimoshi)
The Fat of the Land (The Prodigy)
Remember you're voting for the cover artwork NOT the musical content or artist!
Round 5:
Which COVER do you like better?
For My Mama and Anyone Who Look Like Her (McKinley Dixon)
Avenger (Totimoshi)
Remember you're voting for the cover artwork NOT the musical content or artist!
Round 4:
Which COVER do you like better?
Avenger (Totimoshi)
MONTERO (Lil Nas X)
Remember you're voting for the cover artwork NOT the musical content or artist!
Round 3:
Which COVER do you like better?
The Horror and the Wild (The Amazing Devil)
Avenger (Totimoshi)
Remember you're voting for the cover artwork NOT the musical content or artist!
Round 2:
Which COVER do you like better?
Monoliths & Dimensions (SUNN O))) )
Avenger (Totimoshi)
Remember you're voting for the cover artwork NOT the musical content or artist!
Round 1:
Which COVER do you like better?
FANDOM (Waterparks)
Avenger (Totimoshi)
Remember you're voting for the cover artwork NOT the musical content or artist!
Totimoshi: Milagrosa (2008)
On their fifth studio LP, 2008’s Milagrosa, Bay Area trio Totimoshi made a conscious attempt to broaden their horizons, beyond the heavy-handed post-grunge influences (mostly Nirvana and the Melvins) that had dominated their earlier catalog.
Lyrically, the band’s leading couple, vocalist/guitarist Tony Aguilar and bassist Meg Castellanos, drew from their shared Latin heritage to assemble a semi-conceptual album, even inserting a few Spanish-sung verses into “El Emplazado.”
On the semi-title cut, “Milagroso,” the bitter “Last Refrain” and despairing “The Whisper,” the English tongue works just fine for Aguilar, the son of migrant farm workers, to convey an undocumented nomad’s gloomy outlook for this world, and frail hopes for the next.
And musically, Totimoshi significantly broadened their songwriting dynamics, softening the blow of these cynical numbers with the gentle melodies of “Dear” and acoustics of “Forever in Bone (Los Dos),” then blending hard and soft amid stops and starts on “Sound the Horn,” “The Seeing Eye” and “Little Bee.”
All this variety makes occasional shards of barbed-wire, latter-day grunge like “Fall and Bound” and the dissonant lurch of “Gnat” seem less derivative, bringing Totimoshi ever closer to establishing their own, unique style.
Call it Minority Grunge!
Or don’t call it anything, other than engaging, emotional, inspiring music that celebrates the politically disenfranchised and their sheer willpower against indomitable economics, all for to give their children a better life in a foreign, and often unwelcoming country.
Milagrosa is the kind of music that can make America great again!
More Latter-Day Alternative Rock: Alice in Chains’ Black Gives Way to Blue, Faith No More’s Sol Invictus, Foo Fighters’ Wasting Light, Gozu’s The Fury of a Patient Man, Lo-Pan's Colossus, Queens of the Stone Age’s Lullabies to Paralyze, Royal Thunder’s CVI, Snail’s Feral, Zen Guerrilla’s Shadows On the Sun.
Totimoshi: Sound the Horn
For people who are seeing Tool, the new band from Totimoshi musicians, All Souls, is warming up for Tool. At least for Spring 19.
Check out All Souls too. Their recebt debut release is also killer.