All posts tagged: Álvaro

Álvaro Díaz dares Latin trap fans to expand their palates in ‘Omakase’

Álvaro Díaz dares Latin trap fans to expand their palates in ‘Omakase’

When you first press play on Álvaro Díaz’s “Omakase,” you are immediately transported into the kitchen. A stove flickers on. A knife hits the cutting board. Chants of “¡Sí, chef!” ring out like a dubbed episode of “The Bear.” Then, before the listener can fully settle in, the Puerto Rican rapper and singer fires off bars claiming that Grammys were stolen from him and details his many nights spent sleeping on the floor to his new normal of earning $500,000 per show. It is a boastful, theatrical and deeply specific opener — but after the double whammy of past album releases “Felicilandia” (2021) and “Sayonara” (2024), which helped Díaz ascend well beyond the Puerto Rican trap scene he called home, his swagger feels earned. Across the next 16 tracks, Díaz invites listeners into what he describes as his own kitchen. The title comes from the Japanese tradition of trusting the chef to serve whatever they choose. For Díaz, that idea became the album’s creative language. “I was like, exactly, I want to be the chef,” …

Álvaro Enrigue’s Wild Western – The Atlantic

Álvaro Enrigue’s Wild Western – The Atlantic

In 1836, Apaches raided a remote ranch near Janos, a tiny town on the northern fringes of the state of Chihuahua, in the newly independent republic of Mexico. The Natives absconded with some cattle, as well as with a young widow named Camila. Setting off in pursuit was José María Zuloaga, a taciturn lieutenant colonel in the Mexican army supported by a band of irregulars. Among them: a self-possessed teenager who served as an aide-de-camp, a pair of Yaqui brothers whose permanent address was the town jail, and a sharp-shooting nun named Elvira, who was actually a singer of zarzuelas dressed up in a habit. This is not a history but a delirious, pivotal set piece in Álvaro Enrigue’s novel Now I Surrender, which was published in Spanish in 2018 and is finally available in English this week. Camila’s kidnapping will tie into the true story of Geronimo, the famed Apache warrior and medicine man. Enrigue’s novel is inspired by the long-running Apache Wars of the 19th century, a series of brutal skirmishes between various …