Swing-tropical roots, city-born charm
[Montserrat] no.
Monsieur Periné grew out of Bogota, shaping a swing-tropical blend of bolero, jazz manouche, cumbia, and pop led by
Catalina Garcia and multi-instrumentalist
Santiago Prieto. Across records like
Hecho a Mano and
Encanto Tropical, they keep a hand-played feel with crisp hooks. Expect a set that balances danceable grooves with slower boleros, likely folding in
Nuestra Cancion,
Bailar Contigo, and
Suin Romanticon. The crowd skews bilingual and cross-generational, with couples swaying up front and pockets of dancers forming when hand percussion kicks in. You will hear harmonies sung back in Spanish and English, and see Colombian flags tucked on jackets and guitar cases. Two small notes for fans: they earned the Latin Grammy for Best New Artist in 2015, and
Nuestra Cancion found a second life online years later, pulling new ears to the shows. These plans for songs and stage touches come from informed observation, not a fixed promise of content. At heart,
Monsieur Periné stay nimble, often reshaping familiar tunes to match the room's mood.
The Warm-Breeze Scene Around Monsieur Periné
Vintage swing meets barrio picnic
You will see floral prints, linen shirts, and vintage swing dresses next to sneakers and band tees, a look that mirrors the mix on stage. Fans trade steps during breaks, spinning to cumbia patterns, while others hum guitar lines as if they were hooks. Spanish singalongs land on choruses with easy vowels, and the room often claps on the light backbeat instead of the heavy downbeat. Merch tables lean toward screen-printed posters with tropical birds, soft totes, and vinyl that disappears first in record-loving cities. Between songs, short stories about Bogota or a rhythm's roots draw quiet attention, then the beat returns and pockets of dancing pop up again. It feels social but considerate, with friends making space for a two-step and strangers offering a nod before joining a groove. After the music ends, people linger to compare favorite verses and trade playlists of boleros and manouche swing, keeping the mood alive on the walk out.
Craft Over Flash: How Monsieur Periné Sounds Live
Rhythm first, shine second
Catalina Garcia's tone is warm and precise, riding up front without shouting so the words stay clear when the band digs in. Arrangements favor strong hooks and tidy counter-melodies, with
Santiago Prieto moving between guitar, charango, and violin to shade each section. The rhythm team leans on hand percussion, upright or electric bass, and brush-heavy drums, which keeps the swing feel buoyant instead of busy. Live, they often stretch an intro over a light bolero pulse, then snap into a quicker cumbia or swing to lift the chorus. Tempos breathe rather than lock to machines, so songs can swell when the room claps and settle back for verses. A quieter detail many miss is the switch to smaller-bodied guitars for a brighter attack, which lets the charango sparkle without crowding the vocal. Visuals favor warm color washes and soft strobes, but the real highlight is the interplay, eye contact, and crisp dynamic shifts.
Small choices, big lift
Kindred Travelers in the Monsieur Periné Orbit
Neighbors in rhythm and craft
Fans of
Bomba Estéreo will click with the bright tropical drive and Afro-Caribbean pulse that echo the band's cumbia side. If you follow
Natalia Lafourcade, the acoustic elegance and bolero roots match the group's softer, romantic corners. Story-first listeners who admire
Jorge Drexler will notice the clever phrasing and nimble rhythms that move without forcing the groove. Stateside fans of
La Santa Cecilia will recognize the communal singalongs and vintage-leaning arrangements. All four acts prize melody over sheer volume and host shows where dancing and close listening share space. That blend is exactly where
Monsieur Periné operate, bridging scenes rather than clinging to one niche.