​Los Thuthanaka’s Wak’a is a mellower follow-up to last year’s surprise Pitchfork favorite 

​Los Thuthanaka’s Wak’a is a mellower follow-up to last year’s surprise Pitchfork favorite 

Cover of Los Thuthunaka’s Wak’a featuring a cartoon moth, caterpillar, and eagle.

Los Thuthanaka basically came out of nowhere last year to capture Pitchfork’s album of the year with their self-titled debut. Because it wasn’t available on streaming, it largely flew under the radar. I honestly kind of forgot about it until Pitchfork gave it the number one spot in its year-end list. In retrospect, I’m not entirely sure how, though. Los Thuthanaka sounds like nothing else. It’s joyous, jagged, and sounds like it’s being blasted out of a broken Bluetooth speaker in your neighbor’s backyard – it’s glorious.

The follow-up EP Wak’a turns down the tempo and smooths some of the sharper edges. It uses the same sound palette of blo …

Read the full story at The Verge.

 

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