True to the album's title, the riddims come from everywhere. The boho gem "Buenos Dias" juxtaposes drum and bass beats with Latin hand percussion against an off-kilter country guitar and a hippie-dippy chorus saluting the sun: "It's a brand new day/in my Monterrey." "El Espejo" ("The Mirror") is an inspired weave of two of the world's most mysterious sounds, sinuous Colombian cumbia and Algerian rai, threaded together by Tony Hernández's genius blues guitar. In fact, Hernández is the best thing about ¡Super Riddim Internacional!: The expressivity and originality of his playing put the rappers to shame. Accordionist Campa Valdez holds his own too, especially when he gets to show off on norteño-heavy numbers like "El Venadito" and "Huapanator."
El Gran Silencio has so much energy that ¡Super Riddim Internacional! should be more fun than it is. But too often, when the fusion gets wild, the group's beat-by-rote rappers stomp on the buzz. If El Gran Silencio is serious about the riddim, its rappers need to bring some rhythm to their rhymes. Right now, they've got as much flow as a metronome. Plus, the production is too straightforward and restrained, cleaning up and choking off what should be a big, messy, folkloric sound as wild and loose as the band's imagination.