Hocico


Hocico is a Mexican electro-industrial duo.

History

Erk Aicrag and Racso Agroyam, two angry survivors of the physical and mental violence rising daily on the streets of Mexico City, emerged in 1993 as Hocico, a hard-electro act that lashes out against the deteriorating human spirit with compassion and rage.
The duo was officially formed in 1993 by Erk Aicrag, who sings the lyrics and vocals, and Racso Agroyam, who does programming, but both cousins had been experimenting with electronic music, mixing industrial and EBM, since they were fifteen years old. Their music can be described as electro-industrial. Given the influence of varying currents of electronic music they began their trajectory in 1989 in a project called "Niñera Degenerada". Their lyrics are both in Spanish as well as English. The Spanish word hocico means snout, and is used in Mexico as a disrespectful way to describe someone's comments coming out of their mouth.
Racso and Erk Constantly exploring new musical concepts, Hocico creates dark and aggressive sounds: nightmarish atmospheres, classical landscapes, and driving beats charged with adrenaline and fury. They channel the violence, isolation, and social misconduct of Mexico City into their music to exhibit what society has wronged - letting the music speak for itself.
After being active for 27 years in the underground scene Hocico has become one of the most influential bands of the harder electronic music genre.
Erk and Racso persistently push themselves to be drivers and innovators in the worldwide dark and industrial scene.
Hocico’s trademark talent creates memorable melodies and a highly creative sound design to get club-compatible hell ride with addictive qualities.
Hocico is one of the most active bands in the underground music scene, both live and in the studio. They have released 9 albums, a handful of live DVD’s and countless singles to date.
Agroyam has a side project called Dulce Liquido, while Aicrag has one called Rabia Sorda.

Discography

Demos

Available in Compact Cassette