Todosantos was an audiovisual electronic indie band from Caracas Venezuela, later relocated to Brooklyn, New York. Despite a short career held between Caracas and New York City; Todosantos's DIY ethics, no future vibes, and genre-bending aesthetics have been cited as influential by critically acclaimed Venezuelan artists such as La Vida Boheme[1] (Grammy Winners), Los Mesoneros (Grammy Nominees),[2] Americania, and experimental icon Arca[3] among others. Todosantos's brief career bridged the gap between the Indie and electronic scenes, spearheading the rise of a new generation, willing to redefine what Venezuelan rock would sound and look like for years to come.

Todosantos
OriginCaracas, Distrito Capital, Venezuela
GenresElectronic, indie and Latin
Years active2003–2009
LabelsSuperagencia (Venezuela), Ponirepublic (Mexico), Flamin Hotz (United States)
MembersAlberto Stangarone, Ernesto Pantin, Francisco Mejía, Luis Montenegro and Mariana Martín.
Website[1]

Todosantos shared stage with international artists such as Los Amigos Invisibles, Benny Blanco, Cut Copy, Digitalism, Jarvis Cocker, Spank Rock, Treasure Fingers, Dre Skull, Yacht, The Slits, Kinky & Plastilina Mosh among others.

Made official remixes for El Guincho & Simon Diaz.

History

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The band formed in Caracas in 2003 by Ernesto Pantin (programming) and Alberto Stangarone (guitar, voice, programming). Initially, the band was called Todosantos Dub and its musical orientation was oriented towards electronic trends; beginning to appear in the same year 2003 in some events where with the use of laptop and absence of drums and percussion elements they manage to create an atmosphere of great acceptance.

In 2004, they expanded into a quartet with the addition of Francisco Mejía (bass, guitar, voice) and Luis Montenegro (programming, visual art). They were renamed Todosantos and their style begins to incorporate elements of rock, dark and post-punk, without neglecting the electronic base of their beginnings. They participate, as guests, in the Festival Nuevas Bandas 2004 achieving great acceptance.

Their recording debut comes with the album Aeropuerto (2005).

In 2008 they performed at MX Beat Soundfest[4] in Toluca, Mexico, and South by Southwest[5] in Austin, Texas.

Then Francisco Mejía and Luís Montenegro leave the band, and Mariana Martin enters Todosantos. After this, they settle in Brooklyn, NY where they separate after some time. In 2011, Alberto Stangarone and Alberto Pantín returned to Venezuela with Sunsplash and Cocobass where they continued their musical careers.

Discography

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Aeropuerto (2005) is an indie-electronic album released by la superagencia in 2005. Executive Production Cesar Elster & Mariana Cadavieco. Production Todosantos. Mix & Mastering Claudio Ramirez & Luis Garban @ Cromo* Audiolab, Caracas.

Track listing

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No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."1999"Todosantos3:08
2."A veces"Todosantos2:11
3."Estúpido"Todosantos2:49
4."Diciembre"Todosantos3:45
5."Providencia"Todosantos3:20
6."Folk U"Todosantos2:29
7."Panam"Todosantos4:43
8."Épica"Todosantos2:34
9."Ian Curtis"Todosantos3:46
10."Antes era mejor"Todosantos4:53
11."Atrapado en los 80s"Todosantos3:23
12."Panda Sonora"Todosantos5:02
13."Año nuevo"Todosantos4:50
14."Ilegal"Todosantos2:19
15."Bahía"Todosantos3:00

References

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  1. ^ "'Último Round': Una introducción a la nueva etapa de la Vida Bohème". 29 May 2020.
  2. ^ "Todosantos: A 12 años de 'Aeropuerto' por la banda, sus amigos y más".
  3. ^ "ARCA". November 2017.
  4. ^ "03/08/2008: MX Beat Soundfest 2008 @ Centro Dinámico Pegaso | Concert Archives".
  5. ^ "Todosantos se presentará en el SXSW Festival y en el MX Beat Soundfest". 5 March 2008.