Artist

Fussible

Genre: Electronic
Origin: U.S.A
Listen on Coda
Fussible serves as the creative moniker for Mexican electronica producer Pepe Mogt, whose primary recognition stems from his role within the Nortec Collective. Before adopting that alias, Mogt participated in the industrial outfit Artefakto, whose output on Opción Sónica included the albums Des-Construccion (1993), Tierra Eléctrica (1995), and Interruptor (1997). During the mid-to-late 1990s he also joined forces with fellow Nortec affiliate Ramón Amezcua, better known as Bostich, in the electronica duo Monnithor; several of their joint recordings later appeared on the Mil Records anthologies Nortec Sampler (1999) and Nortec Experimental (2001). Building on those prior endeavors, Mogt launched his own solo work in 1997 under the Fussible name and issued the album Fono (1999) via Opción Sónica. That same year he united with other Mexican electronica artists to form the Nortec Collective, whose name fused the words norteño and techno, and the group subsequently released The Tijuana Sessions, Vol. 1 (2001) and Tijuana Sessions, Vol. 3 (2005). In the intervening period he delivered his first proper solo long-player as Fussible, Odyssea (2002), through Nettwerk America; he also introduced the additional alias Latinsizer and put out Ritmo 55 (2004) on Mil Records; and he reunited with former Monnithor partner Bostich for the 2008 album Tijuana Sound Machine, credited to Nortec Collective Presents Bostich & Fussible.