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With Apollo Solar Drive, we wanted to make a record that felt like light breaking through clouds. Our last album, Materia Negra, was deep space—heavy, shadowy, intense. This time, we turned toward warmth. It’s our tribute to the sun, to movement, to joy.

The whole album is rooted in ’70s Latin funk and jazz fusion, but with a future-facing energy. Think of it as a space ritual with a backbeat. Every note, every rhythm, we tried to infuse with clarity and heat.

Tell us—what track gave you that solar spark?

Comment below, we'd love to hear: What’s your favorite cut so far?

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You know “Madame Shingaling”—maybe it’s how you found us.

That track changed everything for us. It put us on the map, got DJs spinning us from Tokyo to the Bronx. So almost ten years later, we thought: what if she came back… cooler, bluer, trippier?

This is the original:

“Blue Version” is our love letter to the original—but dressed in late-night jazz-funk. She’s moodier now. Still dancing. But this time in candlelight, not neon.

https://sleeve.fm/artists/setenta/a/apollo-solar-drive

If you’ve been with us since the beginning, this one’s for you. And if you ever played it for a special moment—at a party, in your car, with someone you love—we’d love to hear about it?

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Let’s talk about Libérame—our slow-burning, rhythm-forward meditation on freedom.

We wrote this song as a kind of offering. A letting go. A spiritual breath. It’s about liberation in every sense—personal, collective, musical. But what makes this track move isn’t just the message. It’s the rhythm.

Now, when we say Mozambique, we don’t mean the country on the southeastern coast of Africa—though the African diaspora runs through every note of this music. We’re talking about the Mozambique rhythm, a distinct Afro-Cuban groove that emerged in the early 1960s from the brilliant percussionist Pello el Afrokán. He took the drumming traditions of the conga comparsa—those street processions that light up Cuban carnival—and merged them with popular dance forms to create something completely new. It was raw. Bold. Urban. Political.

Later, in the hands of Latin jazz giants like Eddie Palmieri, the Mozambique became something else entirely: a rhythmic engine for jazz and salsa fusion. Palmieri electrified it—layering brass, piano montunos, and complex harmonies over a groove that never lost its street-born swagger.

That’s the lineage we stepped into with Libérame. But we also wanted to flip it.

Live, we usually play Mozambique fast. It drives. Audiences move. The rhythm is undeniable. But for the album, we slowed it way down. Osman said: “Let’s find the depth inside it.” So we sat with the groove. Let the cowbell speak. Let the congas breathe. Added synths that stretch like space dust. Wah-wah guitars like ripples in the dark. It’s still Mozambique, but warped into something cosmic.

It became almost meditative. A ritual in funk time.

We weren’t just trying to rework a traditional form. We were trying to listen to it—really listen—and ask what it could still reveal. In its slowness, Mozambique started to sound like longing. Like asking for room to transform.

That’s Libérame.

That’s what we hope you feel.

💬 Tell us—what did you hear in the rhythm?

—Setenta

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POKEM! That’s how we say hello in Setenta-speak.

We’re trying something new here. After almost 20 years playing, recording, and dancing through the Latin soul universe, we’re launching this page to go deeper with you—our fans, our crew, our solar tribe.

This is where you can:

  • Hear behind-the-scenes stories and unreleased takes
  • Find our personal notes on songs and grooves
  • Join us as we explore what it means to be a band in 2025
  • And yeah… we might drop some exclusives you won’t find anywhere else.

Our latest album Apollo Solar Drive just landed—buy and stream it here on Sleeve or become a member and listen as much as you like. Also, you’ll get the stories that didn’t fit an insta post.

So stick around. Let’s turn listeners into fam.

Preview
Apollo Solar Drive
9 tracks38:13 minutes
Album art

Release

With our sixth album, Apollo Solar Drive, we wanted to do something bold—turn toward the light. This record is our Afro-Latin, retro-futurist tribute to the sun. If Materia Negra was the deep-space voyage into the unknown, this one is the slingshot back toward warmth, clarity, and groove. We’ve been making music together for nearly 20 years, and this feels like the most complete expression of who we are: a crew rooted in Afro-Caribbean rhythms, raised on funk and soul, and always chasing the next idea. Apollo Solar Drive is sunshine you can dance to—cut for vinyl, played live in studio, and built to travel far. All songs composed by SETENTA Line up : Laurent GUILLET : guitars, vocals Florian PELLISSIER : keys Virgile RAFFAËLLI : bass Octave DUCASSE : drum Tchoubine COLIN : vocals, percussions Fabien « Pakin » HILY : vocals, percussions Osman Jr : vocals, percussions Guest : Grégoire Maret : Harmonica on “Apollo Solar Drive” Recording & mix : Jordan Kouby / Question de Son (Paris) Recording for vocal : Pierre Dachery / Studio Prado Mastering : Mika Rangeard Artwork : Virgile Raffaëlli Liner Notes : Bongohead - Peace & Rythm - USA Produced and Published by LATIN BIG NOTE Executive producer Osman Jr license