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Review: The Stone Roses live in Mexico City

April 11, 2013

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A warm up for their forthcoming headline slot at Coachella Festival, The Stone Roses’ performance in Mexico City was not only their first ever date in Mexico, but in all of Latin America.

Even in their heyday, the Roses barely achieved cult status in Mexico. It was no surprise then that the 20,000-capacity arena booked for their first appearance was soon downgraded to a more modest venue, the 7,500-capacity Pepsi Center WTC. Fortunately for those in attendance, this made it one of the Roses’ most intimate gigs since their low-key comeback at Warrington Parr Hall in May 2012.

There was no sign of the new material that Ian Brown had promised when the band announced their reformation back in October 2011, but then very few of the audience would have ever seen the Roses before and they seemed perfectly happy to hear nothing but the classics. Even so, it would have been nice if the strangely overlooked Elephant Stone and the underrated epic Breaking into Heaven had made their way into a setlist which remains essentially unchanged since last summer.

With no support band booked, the audience were treated to Roses favourites by groups such The Clash, Love and The Supremes being blasted out over the PA before the lights dimmed, the fab four appeared onstage and the bassline to traditional opener I Wanna Be Adored rumbled across the room.

The atmosphere was electric and Adored was perfect, with the band having extended the outro with a Doors-like rock jam. Further highlights included a stirring rendition of Ten Storey Love Song and the hypnotic groove of Fools Gold, which showcased both John Squire’s guitar heroics and the band’s astoundingly tight rhythm section.

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Where Angels Play merged seamlessly into Shoot You Down, as did Waterfall into the psychedelic Don’t Stop, with the latter proving the Roses can perform their songs backwards better than most bands can play theirs forwards, although Brown’s notoriously shaky vocals did take a turn for the worse on this number.

In terms of the sound, the only problem was that Squire’s guitars were far too low in the mix, meaning that – at the front at least – his monumental riffs were barely audible on certain songs toward the end of the set. These included the euphoric anthem This is The One, a bluesy Love Spreads – which received a truly rapturous reception from the Mexican crowd – and the ultimate closer I Am The Resurrection, which was preceded by a masterful drum solo from Reni.

Brown, who until recently was married to a Mexican, conversed little with the crowd but did make use of a few Spanish phrases. He surprisingly made no mention of the recent death of Margaret Thatcher but did make clear his attitude toward British nationalism by wiping his arse with a Union Jack that someone had thrown onstage.

As the gig ended the band were all smiles, hugging one another and milking the applause, suggesting there is still plenty of life in arguably the greatest reunion of the 21st century.

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Setlist:

I Wanna Be Adored

Mersey Paradise

(Song for My) Sugar Spun Sister

Sally Cinnamon

Ten Storey Love Song

Where Angels Play

Shoot You Down

Fools Gold

Waterfall

Don’t Stop

Made of Stone

This is the One

Love Spreads

She Bangs the Drums

I Am the Resurrection

Tapalpa: one of Mexico’s most magical towns

April 8, 2013

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A two-hour drive from Guadalajara, Tapalpa is one of 83 towns designated “Pueblos Magicos” (“Magic Villages”) by the Mexican tourist board.

In 2002 Tapalpa became the fifth town in Mexico to win the Pueblo Magico designation, which is only awarded to towns with real natural beauty, cultural riches and historical interest.

The town of Tapalpa is a charming exhibition of colonial architecture, with a beautiful church and a quaint cobbled square. Perfect for a day trip or a weekend break, it is situated in the south of Jalisco state, a short distance southwest of Mexico’s biggest inland body of water, Lake Chapala…

Click here to read this article in full at Global Delivery Report.

Classified: no more government info on organized crime

April 8, 2013

For national security reasons, official reports on organized crime are to remain confidential for a period of 12 years, the federal Attorney General’s Office (PGR) announced this week.

The number, names, structure and territories of drug cartels operating in Mexico will be classified because disclosure of such information could affect law enforcement strategies and put at risk any individuals mentioned in official reports, the PGR told Mexican weekly Proceso.

This appears to be a continuation of Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) policy to stop publicizing drug-trafficking organizations and generally play down the level of violence in Mexico. The PGR also recently put an end to the practise of parading high-profile suspects before the media immediately after arrest.

Over the last six years, the National Action Party (PAN) government headed by Felipe Calderon would frequently flaunt arrests and provided detailed information on organized crime in Mexico, listing the 37 most wanted drug lords and the areas that different gangs operated in. But since assuming power in December, the PRI has taken a different approach to the war on organized crime, releasing comparatively little official information.

President Enrique Peña Nieto has said remarkably little in public about the war on drugs, presumably in a bid to shed Mexico’s violent image and to shift the public focus toward much-needed reforms and other economic issues.