Los Angeles Times

The goal: to move toward unity

- By Randy Lewis randy.lewis@latimes.com Twitter: @RandyLewis­2

“Do you want to get mean?”

So goes the new song from the long-running Mavericks, a band whose rootsy mix of styles often has been more a cause for celebratio­n than social commentary. The track, “Easy as It Seems,” is from the act’s forthcomin­g “Brand New Day” album, due March 31, which will be the first for the band’s new Mono Mundo Recordings label.

Yet the Mavericks aren’t necessaril­y looking for a fight. “Easy as It Seems” is a dance-ready workout that lead singer and chief songwriter Raul Malo said grew out of his observatio­ns during last year’s presidenti­al election battle.

It hones in not on any of the particular candidates but on the divisivene­ss among their various supporters.

“We all kept hearing about people saying, ‘Oh, I’m not looking forward to getting together with my relatives or friends for the holidays because they voted for the other candidate,’ ” Malo, 51, said by phone from his home in Nashville, a brief respite before the band gets back on the road.

“Do you want to get cruel?” the song asks. “Do you think it’s wise to play the fool? Take a look around you, it’s easy not to see / Building walls between us doesn’t fix a thing.”

The track opens with funky saxophones blowing a Cuban-jazz rooted riff, and the horns are soon joined by the rest of the band — guitarist Eddie Perez, keyboardis­t Jerry Dale McFadden and drummer Paul Deakin — who provide a sinuously swaying Latinrock pulse.

Malo has often said he prefers to let his music do most of the philosophi­zing, taking the position that songs can unite people on the dance floor. It’s a point of view that feelings of joy constitute a political statement as valid as any other.

He hopes that’s the outcome of “Easy as It Seems,” with its final verse that asks, “Do you want to get real? / Do you want to have dreams? / Nothing more than this / Easy as it seems.”

The launch of the Mavericks’ Mono Mundo label comes after several years on Valory Music Co.

“We parted on very good terms,” Malo said. “But we were tied to their release schedule because they have all these different acts with records and tours. .

“You know how people get to a certain age and they start saying, ‘Forget it — I’m doing what I want’? Malo said. “I think that’s sort of where we’re at now.”

 ?? Tim Mosenfelde­r Getty Images ?? RAUL MALO is lead singer of the Mavericks.
Tim Mosenfelde­r Getty Images RAUL MALO is lead singer of the Mavericks.

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