
Hermanos Gutiérrez
Maryam Jobe
Description
<p>When some people travel, they take photos on their phone to remember the trip. Old-soul voyagers will recount their adventures with pen and paper. But for Alejandro and Estevan Gutiérrez, who together make the globetrotting Ecuadorian-Swiss duo Hermanos Gutiérrez, their experiences conjure soundtracks, and a visit years ago to the American Southwest changed their sound forever.</p><p>A couple years after forming their duo, the brothers took a trip through Death Valley and the Mojave Desert. “It just blew our minds,” <a href="https://www.premierguitar.com/artists/guitarists/hermanos-gutierrez" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Estevan told <em>PG</em></a>. The desert, he says, “is where our music was born.”</p><p>“Part of what we’re doing is traveling together as brothers,” <a href="https://www.premierguitar.com/artists/guitarists/hermanos-gutierrez" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Alejandro told <em>PG</em> in 2022</a>. “We go to places, we come back and we’re feeling inspired, and we feel like we’ve gotta write something about this place.”</p><p>After finding bountiful inspiration in the West, the duo began turning out mystical compositions, like sonic souvenirs and passport stamps on their consciousness. “It’s just beautiful where we can go with this music,” Alejandro said last year. “It’s just my brother and I together, and we’re so happy to have this.”</p><p>The sold-out Hermanos Gutiérrez concert at Nashville’s <a href="https://www.thebasementnashville.com/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Basement East</a> on June 20th marked their first time performing in Music City since recording <em>El Bueno Y El Malo</em>with Dan Auerbach at Easy Eye Sound in 2022. The pair invited <em>PG</em>’s Chris Kies onstage to decode their spellbinding cinematic sounds. The conversation touched on their symbiotic alchemy, enchanting hollowbodies, and how a single Strymon reset their slow-burn backdrop. </p><p><em>Brought to you by </em><a href=