Daniel Puente Encina

Daniel Puente Encina

Daniel Puente Encina with Dobro (2013)
Background information
Born Santiago de Chile
Occupation(s)
  • Musician
  • Singer-songwriter
  • Composer
  • Producer
  • Film composer
  • Actor
Instruments
  • Vocals
  • Guitar
  • Charango
  • Bass
  • Percussion
  • Keyboards
Years active 1984–present
Labels
  • Polvorosa
  • Intercord
  • Grita! Records
Associated acts
  • Pinochet Boys
  • Niños Con Bombas
  • Polvorosa
Website www.danielpuenteencina.com

Daniel Puente Encina is a Chilean singer-songwriter, guitarist, film composer, producer and actor known for his bands [1] such as the anti-fascist Pinochet Boys from Santiago de Chile, Niños Con Bombas from Hamburg and Polvorosa from Barcelona, where he currently lives.[2] He was born in Santiago de Chile.

Biography

Education and Career

Daniel Puente Encina began teaching himself music at the age of four.[3] On his twelfth birthday, he father gave him a guitar and an hour's lesson. As an adolescent, he studied Musicology and Sociology at the University of Chile.[4]

Los Pinochet Boys (1984–1987)

In his native Chile, he is better known as "Daniel Puente" [5] o "Dani Puente",[6] founder, lead singer and bass player of the anti-fascist new wave/post-punk group Pinochet Boys formed with a few friends[7] in the Santiago of the mid-1980s, one of the most repressive[8] periods of Augusto Pinochet's dictatorship.[9] His first group, it formed part of the Chilean revolution, as noted in a number of books, documentaries[10] and the fourth episode of Chilean drama TV series Los 80[11][12] by Canal 13. In 1984, Carlos Fonseca, a friend of the group and presenter of the programme Fusión contemporánea on Santiago's Radio Beethoven station, offered them a contract with the record company Fusión, owned by his father Mario Fonseca, on the condition that they changed its provocative name –something the group refused to do. The contract was later offered to group Los Prisioneros.[13] Los Pinochet Boys' clandestine concerts were routinely broken up by the police shortly after they began, soon sparking to a youth movement[14][15] in the Chilean capital. Its four members were harassed, threatened and persecuted for their irreverent attitude and wild performances, and often arrested for having dyed hair.[13] In 1987, after only three years together, Los Pinochet Boys were unofficially forced by the military regime to leave the country.[16] After almost two years of organising their own concerts and touring with, amongst others, the Inocentes and Plebe Rude in Brazil and Todos Tus Muertos in Argentina, the group returned to Chile to play an active role[3] in the No campaign for the Chilean national plebiscite, 1988, which put an end to Pinochet's regime. Their sole musical legacy consisted of two cassette recordings: "Botellas contra el pavimento"/"En mi tiempo libre" and "La música del general"/"Esto es Pinochet Boys", which have been copied on numerous occasions over the past decades.[9] In 2012, record company Hueso Records from New York remastered both to produce a 500-copy limited edition 7-inch record entitled Pinochet Boys.

Daniel Puente Encina Berlin (2013). Photo: Roger Askew

Niños Con Bombas (1994–1999)

In 1989, after travelling through Europe, "Daniel Puente" moved to West Berlin a few months before fall of the Wall. There, he became friends with members of Einstürzende Neubauten, who would later on play an important role introducing him to a wider audience.[17] After the fall of the Berlin Wall, Puente Encina settled in Hamburg, where he founded the multicultural group Niños Con Bombas, sharing the stage with a number of bands from the so-called Hamburger Schule indie scene, such as Tocotronic, Blumfeld and Die Goldenen Zitronen. In 1995, Niños Con Bombas won the "John Lennon Talent Award"[18][19] and signed deals with Stuttgart label Intercord and New York-based international alternative Latin record company Grita! Records,[20] founded by Bad Religion's original drummer Jay Ziskrout. The band released two albums: Niños Con Bombas de tiempo en el momento de la explosión (1996) and El Niño (1997). Due to the MTV Music Television Video Rotation[21] and radio airplays, songs such as Skreamska and Postcard were popular in Europe, South America and the US, which the group toured in 1997, with concerts in New Jersey, Boston, Philadelphia, Washington, Virginia, New York,[22] Los Angeles and San Francisco. In 1998, they played in front of a crowd of 90,000 at the Rock al Parque festival[23] in Bogotá, Colombia and, in 1999, at Austin's South by Southwest (SXSW) Music Festival, with The New York Times saying "one of the most interesting performances was that of Niños Con Bombas".[24] In South America, Puente Encina and his group toured countries such as Chile, Argentina, Mexico, Brazil and Colombia[20] and performed its alternative Latin Jazz-Ska-Rock sound in Europe as openers for Einstürzende Neubauten. In 1999, Niños Con Bombas moved to Los Angeles, but due to internal differences split shortly afterwards.[25]

Daniel Puente Encina, backstage White Trash Club, Berlin (2013). Photo: Roger Askew

Polvorosa (2000–2011)

In 2000, Puente Encina moved back to Europe and began performing and producing under the name "Polvorosa" in Barcelona, Spain. Once again changing musical direction, he created a new style: "Latin-Elektro-Clash". "Polvorosa" toured Europe and, as openers for Chambao and Ojos de Brujo, the entire Iberian peninsula. In 2004, he released the album Radical Car Dance. The track Behind de mi House[26][27] became known worldwide after its video, created by German film director Marten Persiel, was chosen by MTV Music Television for its 2004 DVD compendium "Los Vídeos Mas Espectaculares"[28] ("The Most Spectacular Videos"). In 2009, Puente Encina abandoned electronica in favour of a more natural feel and more organic sound.[29] The end result was a mix of Latin, desert rock, jazz and world music. In 2011, he was chosen by Spanish nonprofit organization Instituto Cervantes in Tel Aviv to give a number of concerts in Israel.

Solo career

In 2012, Daniel Puente Encina recorded his first album under his own name: Disparo,[30] a blues-based work noteworthy for the minimalism of its instrumentation. Its ten tracks included an updated version of "Botellas contra el pavimento" by way of a personal tribute to his first band, "Pinochet Boys". The album was released in spring 2012 and launched in his native Chile,[9] with a subsequent tour of Spain,[31] Germany and Denmark. In 2013, before continuing with his German tour, with the support of Catalan governmental organisation Institut Ramon Llull, he invited New York soul singer Mónica Green, granddaughter of Margaret "Maggie" Price of The-Cabineers, to the studio to take part in the recording of new versions of Lío and Mike Tysonboth songs from this album, to give the chorus a touch of Motown.[32]

July 2014 saw Puente Encina release Chocolate con Ají[33][34] (Chocolate with Chilli), the second album under his own name, containing a mixture of genres and described on his website as a personal "Best Of" album, a compilation of his favourite previously unreleased compositions. It reflects a wide variety of styles ranging from South American music, rhythm and blues and Caribbean sounds. He promoted the album in Denmark, during the Copenhagen Jazz Festival, in Germany and Italy and began another European tour in 2015. Puente Encina was invited by the Cuban Music Institute's National Centre for Popular Music to give four performances at the 31st "Jazz Plaza" Havana International Jazz Festival in December 2015.

Style and influences

Daniel Puente Encina has created—and recreated—a number of different styles of music. With Los Pinochet Boys, he offered a mix of new wave and post-punk. With Niños Con Bombas, he fused Latin, jazz, ska and rock with punk elements.[18] In 2004, under the name 'Polvorosa, he invented a new style he dubbed "Latin-Elektro-Clash".[35] 2012's Disparo is a minimalist, blues-based album[36] fusing R&B, Son cubano, Reggae and Bolero elements with African and Afro-Peruvian rhythms. His 2014 album Chocolate con Ají mixes South American musical influences, rhythm and blues and Caribbean music,[37] providing a listening experience embracing everything from boogaloo blues, 60s Latin soul, samba funk and Latin rap to Dixie country ska, slow swing and indie-Cuban ballads.[38] According to his website, he calls such creations "Furious Latin Soul", "Dirty Boogaloo", "Rebel Tango" and "Dixie Country Ska". Although he mainly sings in Spanish, Puente Encina occasionally uses a mix of different languages in his lyrics. With Niños Con Bombas, he wrote songs such as Ton Ego n'est pas toi, sung partly in French. With Polvorosa, he sang in Portuñol, a mix of Portuguese and Spanish, in English and Spanish alone, and also in Spanglish, the mix of the latter two languages used mainly by the Latino community in the US. He plays a variety of guitars when performing, frequently swapping between his Dobro, resonator, 1962 Höfner electric and Camps classical guitars.

Film and TV

In the 1990s, Niños Con Bombas caught the eye of Turkish-German film director Fatih Akin, who contacted Daniel Puente Encina, marking the start of long working relationship.[39][40] Puente Encina's songs Cocomoon and Nunca Diré formed part of the soundtrack of the Akin's first feature, 1998's crime film Short Sharp Shock. Puente Encina also composed songs such as El Amor se demora and Ramona for the director's road movie Im Juli (in July 2000), in which he had a cameo role with Niños Con Bombas, singing the song Velocidad. He also wrote the song Not here for the multi-award-winning drama film Head On (2004). In 2012, Daniel Puente Encina was interviewed during his Chilean tour by Joe Vasconcellos for El baile de los que sobran,[41] a documentary on singer Jorge González, as well as by Alfredo Lewin for the Via X TV programme Red Hot Chilean People,[42] for which he also performed five songs live. Lewin was a famous MTV video jockey[43] and had previously interviewed Puente Encina in the 90s for MTV Latin America in Miami. In April 2015, Daniel Puente Encina played a supporting role[44] as "Sadler", P.E.N. congress visitor in Buenos Aires, in Maria Schrader's film Stefan Zweig: Farewell to Europe (Original title in German: Vor der Morgenröte), nominated for the Deutscher Filmpreis 2016 in two categories: Maria Schrader for Best Director and Barbara Sukowa for Best Supporting Actress.

Discography

Pinochet Boys

Niños Con Bombas

Polvorosa

Solo Albums

Selected filmography

  • 1998 - Short Sharp Shock, crime film by Fatih Akin, (Songs "Cocomoon" and "Nunca Diré": Original Soundtrack). Film score composer
  • 2000 - Im Juli (English: In July). Cameo appearance with Niños Con Bombas in Fatih Akin's road movie. (Songs "El amor se demora" and "Ramona": Original Soundtrack). Film score composer.
  • 2004 - Head-On, German: "Gegen die Wand", multi-award winning drama film by Fatih Akin (Song "Not here": Original Soundtrack). Film score composer
  • 2015 - Vor der Morgenröte by Maria Schrader Supporting actor as the congress visitor "Sadler".

Documentary film

  • 2012 - "El baile de los que sobran". Music documentary film about Jorge González. Chile, TV-Serie: Doremix with Joe Vasconcellos, Screenplay: Cristián Freund, Fernando Fuentes, Rodrigo Sepúlveda, Directed by Werner Giesen, Rodrigo Sepúlveda, Produced by: CNTV, Zoofilms, first broadcast: 09th of September 2012 by TVN, TV Chile

Awards

References

  1. García, Marisol (18 April 2012). "Daniel Puente, nómade solitario" [Daniel Puente, solitary nomad]. Qué pasa (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  2. "Daniel Puente Encina's Official Website".
  3. 1 2 Damm, Florian (1 May 2015). "Daniel Puente Encina im Interview mit Florian Damm" [Daniel Puente Encina is interviewed by Florian Damm]. Soundcheck (in German). 120 minutes in. Radio Okerwelle 104,6. Retrieved 1 May 2015.
  4. Aguayo, Emiliano (2014). Las Voces de los '80 [The Voices of the 80s] (in Spanish). Santiago de Chile: RiL. p. 65.
  5. Ibarz, Joaquim (19 October 1986). "Los hijós rockeros de Pinochet se rebelan. El movimiento pop chileno sale de las catacumbas a las que fue condenado por la dictadura militar" [Pinochet's rocker children rebel. The Chilean pop movement comes out of the catacombs to which it was condemned by the military dictatorship.]. La Vanguardia (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  6. Ponce, David (24 December 2012). "Gonzalo Donoso presenta "Retratos músicos chilenos" - Esto es memoria fotográfica" [Gonzalo Donoso presents "Chilean Musician's Portraits" - This is photographic memory.]. El Mercurio on-line (Emol) (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  7. Urzua, Patricio (October 2008). "Los Pinochet Boys en Rolling Stone: Rock y dictadura: bailando en la oscuridad." [Los Pinochet Boys in the Rolling Stone: Rock and dictatorship: dancing in the darkness.]. El Blog de Midia (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  8. Durán, Amanda (May 2012). "Daniel Puente: "Soy el tipo que está encerrado en su taller, porque lo llevo conmigo, en mi guitarra"" [Daniel Puente: "I am the type that is shut up in his studio, because I take it with me, in my guitar"] (PDF). El Ciudadano Nº 124 (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  9. 1 2 3 Godoy, José Luis (23 April 2012). "Señores Pasajeros con José Luis Godoy. Entrevista con Daniel Puente Encina" [Señores Pasajeros with José Luis Godoy. Interview with Daniel Puente Encina]. Señores Pasajeros (in Spanish). 15:49 minutes in. Radio Uno 97.1 FM. Retrieved 15 May 2012.
  10. El documental de Pinochet Boys [The Pinochet Boys documental] (in Spanish). Santiago de Chile: The Clinic TV / Nuez TV. 22 June 2011. Retrieved 8 October 2015.
  11. Jürgensen, Mauricio (8 November 2010). "La intimidad con que se construye el nuevo ciclo de Los 80." [The intimacy with which the new cycle of The 80's is constructed.]. La Tercera (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  12. Publimetro, Editorial (8 November 2010). "Los 80' reviven a los "Pinochet boys" y arrasan en sintonía." [The 80s revive the "Pinochet boys" with triumphant reception.]. Publimetro (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  13. 1 2 Cossio, Hector (1 October 2014). "Daniel Puente Encina: de vocalista de los míticos Pinochet Boys al músico total que se consolida en Europa" [Daniel Puente Encina: from vocalist of mythical Pinochet Boys to total musician becoming consolidated in Europe]. El Mostrador (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  14. García, Marisol (1 March 2013). "Pinochet Boys" [Pinochet Boys]. EDA. Educación Antiautoritaria, Edición Nº 9 (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  15. Karweik, Hans (21 May 2013). ""Musik hat einen unfassbaren Einfluss" - WN-Exklusiv-Gespräch mit Daniel Puente Encina. Der Komponist kreierte den "Furious Latin Soul" in Spanien." ["Music has an unfathomable influence" - WN exclusive interview with Daniel Puente Encina. The composer created the "Furious Latin Soul" in Spain.]. Wolfsburger Nachrichten (in German). Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  16. Nurmi, Tilo (11 April 2012). "Entrevista a Daniel Puente Encina: El amor como acto de rebeldía." [Interview with Daniel Puente Encina: Love as act of rebelliousness.]. Absenta Musical (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  17. Ponce, David (11 April 2012). "Daniel Puente Encina - Ciudadano (fuera) del mundo" [Daniel Puente Encina - Citizen (outside) of the world]. El Mercurio On-line (Emol) (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  18. 1 2 Stark, Jürgen (21 April 1995). "Aufstieg aus dem Untergrund" [Rise from the underground]. Hamburger Abendblatt (in German). Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  19. Stark, Jürgen (3 June 1995). "Gewinner des "John Lennon Förderpreises '95": die Gruppen SubOrange Frequency und Ninos Con Bombas" [Winners of the "John Lennon Talent Award '95": the bands SubOrange Frequency and Ninos Con Bombas]. Rolling Stone (in German). Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  20. 1 2 Hurtado, Ana María (April 1998). Recuerdos de verano - Niños Con Bombas [Summer memories - Niños Con Bombas] (in Spanish). Revista Rock & Pop Nº47.
  21. Vidal, Vadim (2 May 2012). "Daniel Puente Encina: El Pinochet Boys solitario" [Daniel Puente Encina: The solitary Pinochet Boys]. Paula (in Spanish). Retrieved 29 March 2016.
  22. Lannert, John (13 September 1997). Latin Notas [Latin Notes]. Billboard. p. 40.
  23. Instituto Distrital de las Artes, Editorial (1998). "1998 Artistas" [1998 Artists]. Rock al Parque (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  24. Strauss, Neil (24 March 1999). "Correction: March 29, 1999 - The Pop Life; Tough Times: Rock's Incubator Turns Down the Heat.". The New York Times. Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  25. Panes, Andrés (May 2012). "Daniel Puente Encina - El retorno del cowboy espacial" [Daniel Puente Encina - The return of the space cowboy]. Rockaxis, Nº 111, pages 82–83 (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  26. Arnold, Florian (24 February 2015). "Der Rebell, der aus Chile kam" [The rebel who came from Chile]. Braunschweiger Zeitung (in German). Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  27. Ordovás, Jesús (19 May 2004). "Entrevista a Maga y a Polvorosa" [Interview with Maga and Polvorosa]. Diario Pop (in Spanish). La Web de Los Oyentes de Radio3. Radio3, RNE. Retrieved 8 October 2015.
  28. MTV Magazine (2004). "Los Videos Mas Espectaculares" [The Most Spectacular Videos]. Discogs (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  29. Wilke, Katrin; Romero-Castillo, Evan (5 February 2011). "Polvorosa: el lado oscuro de la música "latina"" [Polvorosa: the dark side of "Latin" music]. Deutsche Welle (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  30. Panes, Andrés (15 May 2012). "Daniel Puente Encina - Disparo" [Daniel Puente Encina - Disparo (Shot)]. Rockaxis (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  31. Mula, Iván F. (14 September 2012). "Latin soul de la controversia" [Latin soul of the controversy]. La Vanguardia (in Spanish). Retrieved 29 March 2016.
  32. Fierro, Roberto (2 June 2013). "Monica Green y Daniel Puente Encina graban juntos" [Monica Green and Daniel Puente Encina record together]. The Concert In Concert (in Spanish). Retrieved 29 March 2016.
  33. Salazar, Carlos (23 June 2014). "Daniel Puente, ex Pinochet Boys: "Fuimos los primeros hipsters"" [Daniel Puente, ex-Pinochet Boys: "We were the first hipsters"]. La Nación (in Spanish). Retrieved 29 March 2016.
  34. Carrasco, Juan Guillermo (12 September 2014). "Daniel Puente Encina - Chocolate Con Ají" [Daniel Puente Encina - Chocolate Con Ají (Chocolate with Chilli)]. Rockaxis (in Spanish). Retrieved 29 March 2016.
  35. Arbejderen, Editorial (11 September 2013). "En musikalsk rebel og en latin soul-man kommer til Danmark" [A musical rebel and a Latin soul-man comes to Denmark]. Arbejderen (in Danish). Retrieved 29 March 2016.
  36. Knobloch, Andreas (25 April 2013). "Ein Punker bekommt den (Afro-)Blues" [A punk gets the (Afro-) blues]. Mallorca Zeitung (in German). Palma de Mallorca.
  37. Steger, Leonie (February 2015). "Daniel Puente Encina im Interview »Immer noch ein musikalischer Rebell«" [Interview with Daniel Puente Encina »Still a musical rebel«]. Indigo (in German). Retrieved 29 March 2016.
  38. Schmidt, Hanna (7 January 2015). "Daniel Puente Encina "Meine Texte sind ein Urschrei des Seins"" [Daniel Puente Encina "My lyrics are a primal scream of being"]. WAZ (in German). Retrieved 29 March 2016.
  39. Sandgathe, Laura (5 September 2014). "Er schrieb Filmmusik zu "Gegen die Wand" - Daniel Puente Encina bringt Lateinamerika nach Duisburg" [He wrote film music for "Head On" - Daniel Puente Encina brings Latin America to Duisburg]. Rheinische Post (in German). Retrieved 29 March 2016.
  40. Kalle, Kathleen (June 2013). "Rebell und Weltbürger" [Rebel and cosmopolite]. Indigo (in German). Retrieved 29 March 2016.
  41. Vasconcellos, Joe; Freund, Cristián; Fuentes, Fernando; Sepúlveda, Rodrigo; Giesen, Werner (9 September 2012). "El baile de los que sobran" [The dance of those who remain]. Doremix (in Spanish). TVN Chile.
  42. Lewin, Alfredo (4 February 2013). "Lunes en Red Hot Chilean People: Daniel Puente Encina" [Monday in Red Hot Chilean People: Daniel Puente Encina]. Red Hot Chilean People (in Spanish). VIA X HD Chile. Retrieved 29 March 2016.
  43. Cobo-Hanlon, Leila (22 November 1994). "Heating Up the MTV Latino Connection: Television: VJ Alfredo Lewin, who has become almost as popular as the rock stars he interviews, wants to take the network to new heights as a cultural force". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 29 March 2016.
  44. Nurmi, Tilo (26 May 2015). "Mira el show en vivo de Daniel Puente Encina en Berlín" [Watch Daniel Puente Encina's live show]. Absenta Musical (in Spanish). Retrieved 29 March 2016.

Further reading

External links

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