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Bostich + Fussible

Bostich + Fussible are an electronica production duo associated with the Tijuana, Mexico-based Nortec Collective whose style fuses norteño with techno. Made up of Ram memoryón Amezcua (i.e., Bostich) and Pepe Mogt (we.e., Fussible), the duo 1st teamed up for the electronica task Monnithor through the middle- to past due ’90s, ultimately liberating a few of their collaborative productions for the Mil Information compilations Nortec Sampler (1999) and Nortec Experimental (2001). Ahead of teaming up, both had worked separately. Amezcua started operating as Bostich in 1988, liberating the recording Elektronische (1994) for the label Opción Sónica, while Mogt started operating as Fussible in 1997, liberating the recording Fono (1999) on Opción Sónica. Ahead of operating as Fussible, Mogt have been a member from the commercial music group Artefakto, which released the albums Des-Construccion (1993), Tierra Unéctrica (1995), and Interruptor (1997) on Opción Sónica. From 1999, in the wake of their collaboration as Monnithor, Amezcua and Mogt worked well collectively as contributors towards the Nortec Collective — a collective of Mexican electronica suppliers whose design fused norteño with techno (therefore the word “nortec”) — and their specific productions as Bostich and Fussible had been featured around the albums The Tijuana Classes, Vol. 1 (2001) and Tijuana Classes, Vol. 3 (2005). After that in 2008 they released the collaborative recording Tijuana Sound Machine, billed to “Nortec Collective Presents Bostich + Fussible.”

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