Guitarist and artist Jimena Torres’ path through Costa Rican indie scene hasn’t been in vain thanks to her noteworthy collaborations with emerging musical acts in the recent years.

Most of his days looking for new sounds. Living in vapor from the tropics and blogging at Dance To The Radio, Salvajenada & El Amarillo.
Costa Rica

It took five years for the Costa Rican alternative quartet Magpie Jay to arrange their debut album, but the record called “Monte Claro” showed it was worth the time it took to get its final shape.

Colombian-born, Costa Rica-based producer Suzi Love leads us thorough a popish journey where bubbles and sprinkles became one.

A noisy girl group from Heredia in Costa Rica. Sonya Carmona (g/voc) and Alison Alvarado (dr/voc) formed Colornoise a couple of years ago, and since then released two full-length albums as a duo: “Fake Apocalypse” in 2011 and “Polychronic” in 2013.

San José indie-quartet 424 have just amused listeners even far away from Costa Rican borders with their video for “Al Hueco” – a spectacular reconstruction of works by the famous Belgian painter René Magritte. To bring his art to life, they’ve spent over half a year and enlisted the help of two dozen people. It was worth it.

San José indie-quartet 424 have just amused listeners even far away from Costa Rican borders with their video for “Al Hueco” – a spectacular reconstruction of works by the famous Belgian painter René Magritte. To bring his art to life, they’ve spent over half a year and enlisted the help of two dozen people. It was worth it.

Ojo de Buey is a reggae band from San José in Costa Rica fusing Afro-Caribbean rhythms with Latin sounds and a message you’d usually associate with Central Americe. Life, love, and an optimistic approach to day-to-day struggle.