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Elsewhere, accordionist Jesus Cuevas is given the keys to the Blazers, with sterling results. "Coco Rayado" has the most South Mexican feel of the squeezebox numbers, while Tejanos can revel in "Vieja Escalera" and "Tu Nuevo Cariñito"; the rambling free-range accordion fills a masterful display of el sonido de San Antonio. By contrast, Gonzales's orchestral accordion on "Grande de Caderas" carries with it a surprising but palpable whiff of Paris.
A valid quibble: Puro Blazers clocks in at a tantalizing 37 minutes. While not a one of those is wasted, one is left starved for more. It's like a plate of top nachos split five ways.
Rounder is calling this "Latin roots rock," and my only quibble with that is the "Latin" qualifier. This is roots rock par excellence, as all music truly from the roots "rocks." The sooner a third like-minded band from East L.A. comes along to muddy the inevitable comparisons to Los Lobos the better.