M.A.S Música: Argentine & Venezuelan Trio Based in Paris — Artist Profile
Artist Profile · Latin Trio · Paris

M.A.S Música Argentine and Venezuelan Roots — One Stage in Paris

Based Paris, France Origins Argentina · Venezuela Genre Latin · Jazz · World Music
M
Mauro
A
Alejandro
S
Sebastian
M.A.S Música trio Latin music Paris
Overview

Who Is M.A.S Música?

M.A.S Música is a Latin trio based in Paris, formed by three musicians — Mauro, Alejandro and Sebastian — who bring together the musical traditions of Argentina and Venezuela in the heart of one of the world’s most musically diverse cities. Their music is warm, rhythmically alive, and built on a deep respect for the Latin American tradition they carry with them.

What makes M.A.S Música distinctive is not just their roots but what they do with them. They are equally at home playing a Venezuelan Afro Caribbean rhythm, a jazz standard that belongs to every culture, or a French classic reimagined through a South American lens. The trio navigates genres the way experienced travelers navigate cities — with confidence, curiosity, and no fear of getting lost.

Based in Paris, they perform for audiences who may have never visited Buenos Aires or Caracas but who recognize immediately the feeling these cities carry in their music: heat, movement, a particular kind of joy that is inseparable from its melancholy.

Three Countries. One Sound.

M.A.S Música is the product of three musical journeys — from Argentina, from Venezuela, and through Paris — converging into something that belongs fully to all three and exclusively to none.

M.A.S Música performing live Paris
The Name

The Name: M · A · S

The name M.A.S is an acronym built from the first letters of the three members’ names: Mauro, Alejandro, and Sebastian. But the acronym does something else at the same time — it spells the Spanish word más, meaning more. It is the right word for a trio that consistently brings more than expected: more rhythm, more range, more warmth, more emotional depth than the format of a three piece typically promises.

M
Mauro
Argentine musician
Strings and melody
A
Alejandro
Venezuelan percussionist
Rhythm and roots
S
Sebastian
Argentine musician
Harmony and texture

The word más is also a quiet statement of artistic philosophy. In a musical landscape that often rewards simplification and reduction, M.A.S Música chooses to add. More instrumentation. More cultural reference. More emotional register. More conversation between traditions that rarely share the same stage.

“Each note played by M.A.S Música carries the authenticity and passion that has defined each member’s individual musical journey.”

— France Music
The Sound

The Sound: Latin Roots, Global Reach

The music of M.A.S Música is built on two of Latin America’s richest and most distinct musical traditions. Argentina brings tango, folk, and the complex harmonic language of the River Plate region — a tradition that has been in conversation with European classical music for over a century. Venezuela brings Afro Venezuelan percussion, joropo, and the rhythmic vocabulary of the Caribbean coast — music rooted in the same African diaspora that shaped jazz, cumbia, and salsa.

These two traditions rarely share a single ensemble. M.A.S Música makes that combination feel natural — because for Mauro, Alejandro, and Sebastian, these sounds are not academic references but lived languages. They grew up with them. They think in them.

Paris adds a third dimension: the city’s jazz clubs, world music stages, French chanson tradition, and relentlessly international audience have shaped the trio’s sound into something that communicates across all borders. Their music is Latin in its roots and universal in its reach.

Repertoire

Repertoire — From Poinciana to La Javanaise

One of the most striking things about M.A.S Música is the breadth of their repertoire. They move between Latin originals, jazz standards, and French classics without friction — treating each genre not as a separate territory but as a different dialect of the same emotional language.

Track / PieceStyleOriginal Artist / Context
PoincianaJazz StandardImmortalized by Ahmad Jamal (1958) — one of jazz piano’s most iconic recordings
La JavanaiseFrench ClassicWritten and performed by Serge Gainsbourg (1963) — one of French chanson’s most celebrated songs
Été IndienFrench ClassicJoe Dassin’s beloved 1975 song — a staple of French popular music
AngelinaLatinLatin melodic piece in the trio’s live rotation
SpartacusCinematicInspired by Aram Khachaturian’s ballet theme, reinterpreted with Latin rhythms
Original CompositionsLatin OriginalMaterial blending Argentine and Venezuelan musical traditions
Why Poinciana?

Ahmad Jamal’s 1958 live recording of Poinciana is one of the most influential jazz performances ever captured. Its sparse, hypnotic rhythm and melody share a deep structural kinship with Latin music — which is exactly why it works so naturally in M.A.S Música’s hands. The song becomes a bridge between two musical worlds that were never as far apart as geography suggests.

The inclusion of Gainsbourg and Dassin in their French repertoire is equally deliberate. Both artists are beloved in France but also carry a cosmopolitan quality — Gainsbourg in particular drew heavily on Latin rhythms, bossa nova, and Caribbean influences throughout his career. When M.A.S Música plays La Javanaise, they are not reaching across a cultural divide. They are meeting a song that was already halfway toward them.

The Venezuelan Connection

Alejandro: The Percussion Heart of the Trio

The rhythmic core of M.A.S Música is Venezuelan percussionist Alejandro Guerrero — a musician whose background is itself a study in how deep roots and open horizons can coexist. Alejandro trained under Carlos Nené Quintero, Venezuela’s most respected percussionist and the inventor of the Baticonga, who spent decades performing alongside Eros Ramazzotti, Celia Cruz, Barry White, and Gato Barbieri.

He also studied music theory and composition with Alex Rodriguez “El Marciano”, a prominent Venezuelan composer. These two teachers gave him not just technique but philosophy — a way of thinking about rhythm as color, as emotional contribution, as conversation rather than timekeeping.

In his broader career, Alejandro has collaborated with Chino y Nacho (Latin Grammy Winners), Jorge Villamizar (Colombia, Latin Grammy Winner), Ilegales (Dominican Republic, Latin Grammy Winners), Manu Katché (France), Patrick Fiori, Soprano, Zoufris Maracas, and Rember Duarte. He brings all of that range to M.A.S Música — and it is audible in every performance.

The Afro Venezuelan Backbone

Venezuela’s percussion tradition — rooted in the Afro Venezuelan communities of Barlovento and San Agustín, Caracas — is one of the deepest rhythmic vocabularies in the world. When Alejandro plays, that vocabulary is present in every strike. It grounds the trio’s more harmonic and melodic material in something ancient and immediate.

Live Performances

Watch M.A.S Música

These recordings capture M.A.S Música across their full range — from energetic Latin originals to reimagined French classics and jazz standards.

M.A.S Música — Trio Performance

M.A.S Música — “Poinciana” · Ahmad Jamal jazz standard reimagined with Latin percussion

M.A.S Música — “Angelina” & “Spartacus”

M.A.S Música — “Été Indien” (Joe Dassin) & “La Javanaise” (Serge Gainsbourg)

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

What does M.A.S stand for?

M.A.S is an acronym of the three members’ names: Mauro, Alejandro, and Sebastian. It also spells más — Spanish for “more” — reflecting the trio’s philosophy of always bringing something extra to their music.

Where is M.A.S Música from?

The trio is based in Paris, France. Their musical roots come from Argentina and Venezuela — two of Latin America’s most distinctive musical traditions. This combination of South American origins and Parisian stage presence defines their sound.

What kind of music does M.A.S Música play?

M.A.S Música blends Latin American rhythms (Argentine and Venezuelan), jazz standards (including Poinciana, famously recorded by Ahmad Jamal), and French classics (La Javanaise by Gainsbourg, Été Indien by Joe Dassin). Their sound is warm, rhythmically rich, and accessible across all backgrounds.

Who is Alejandro in the trio?

Alejandro is Venezuelan percussionist Alejandro Guerrero, who studied under Carlos Nené Quintero — Venezuela’s foremost percussionist — and music theory under Alex Rodriguez “El Marciano.” In his broader career he has collaborated with Chino y Nacho, Jorge Villamizar, Ilegales, and Manu Katché, among others.

Where can I book or contact M.A.S Música?

Visit their official website at masmusica.art for bookings, contact, and the latest updates on their performances in Paris and across France.

Latin America Lives in Paris More Artists at France Music

M.A.S Música is one of many extraordinary stories from the global music scene.

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