The Various Algo Salvaje Vol.4 vinyl arrives as the fourth chapter in Munster Records’ ongoing anthology dedicated to unearthing the wild, overlooked corners of mid-twentieth century rock, and this installment makes a sharp geographic pivot from the series’ Spanish origins to the garages and studios of 1960s Peru.
What Algo Salvaje Vol.4 Is and Why It Matters
The first three volumes of Algo Salvaje concentrated on Spanish nuggets, building a reputation for the series as a serious archival project rather than a casual hits package. Vol.4 breaks new ground by focusing entirely on Peruvian 60s garage beat, specifically its darker, more rebellious, and more obscure corners. The premise is familiar to anyone who has followed the global spread of that era’s sound: bands across the world absorbed what was coming out of the US and UK, then filtered it through their own circumstances and temperaments, often arriving somewhere rawer and stranger than their influences. Peru was no exception. The 14 tracks here demonstrate a scene with genuine teeth, and a significant number of them are reissued for the first time anywhere. Many are sourced from the Discos MAG catalog, a Peruvian label whose output has remained stubbornly difficult to locate in any format for decades. The compilation was released on July 25, 2023, under Munster Records catalog number MR 441.
The Various Algo Salvaje Vol.4 Vinyl: Format and Contents
This is a standard LP pressing on Munster Records, catalog MR 441. The package includes liner notes written by Marco Caballero of freneticos.net, a recognized authority on this specific genre, and those notes are accompanied by original record label scans and artist photographs from the period. That documentation matters on a release like this, where many of the acts are genuinely obscure and context is not easy to find elsewhere. The tracklist moves across a range of Peruvian acts, from Los Saicos, who carry some name recognition among international garage collectors, to groups like Delai Alamos con Los King Stay and Jean Paul “El Troglodita” whose records are the kind of thing that surfaces once in a decade at a South American record fair. Traffic Sound and New Juggler Sound round out the selection with a slightly more psych-inflected sensibility, keeping the compilation from feeling one-dimensional.
Who Should Want This Record
If you collect global garage and psych and you have already worked through the obvious European and American material, this is the kind of release that genuinely extends your understanding of what the 1960s sounded like outside the Anglophone world. The first-time reissue status of most tracks here is not marketing language. These recordings have been inaccessible in any practical sense for most collectors outside Peru. Munster Records has a long track record with exactly this kind of careful excavation, and Caballero’s expertise gives the project credibility. This is archival work that also happens to be loud and fun.
Tracklist
1. LOS MUTABLES: SUSPENSO EN EL ESPACIO 2. PINA Y SUS ESTRELLAS: LOS EXTRANOS 3. LOS YORKS: ABRAZAME 4. LOS DACIOS: DILE 5. LOS SAICOS: EL ENTIERRO DE LOS GATOS (INSTRUMEN 6. LOS TEDDY'S: EFECTOS 7. DELAI ALAMOS CON LOS KING STAY: EL GRITO DE LOS KING 8. MELCOCHITA: EL SICODELICO 9. LOS 007: ESCUCHA, NENA 10. TRAFFIC SOUND: I'M SO GLAD 11. LOS JUNIOR'S: TERCERA PIEDRA DEL SOL 12. LOS SILVERTONES: CUARTO BLANCO 13. JEAN PAUL "EL TROGLODITA': FUERA DE ATRACCION 14. NEW JUGGLER SOUND: TROUBLE CHILD





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