La era de la boludez

La era de la boludez [Age of stupidity] is a studio album released in 1993 by Argentine rock band Divididos. It contains a lot of the most famous songs by the group, as "El arriero" (original by Atahualpa Yupanqui), "¿Qué ves?" and "Salir a comprar". It is the best-selling album of Divididos,[1] selling over 480,000 copies.[2]

La Era De La Boludez
Studio album by
Released1993
GenreHard rock, Psychedelic rock, Argentine rock
Length51:23
LabelPolyGram Discos
ProducerGustavo Santaolalla
Divididos chronology
Acariciando lo áspero
(1991)
La Era De La Boludez
(1993)
Otro le travaladna
(1995)

In 2007, the Argentine edition of Rolling Stone ranked it seventh on its list of "The 100 Greatest Albums of National Rock".[3]

Track listing

  1. Salir a Asustar [Go Out To Scare]
  2. Ortega y Gases [Wordplay on Spanish philosopher Ortega y Gasset's last name and the word gases (farts)]
  3. El Arriero (original by Atahualpa Yupanqui) [The Muleteer]
  4. Salir a Comprar [Go Out To Buy]
  5. ¿Qué Ves? [What Do You See?]
  6. Pestaña de Camello [Camel Eyelash]
  7. Rasputín/Hey Jude
  8. Dame un Limón [Give Me A Lemon]
  9. Paisano de Hurlingham [Hurlingham Dude]
  10. Cristófolo Cacarnú
  11. Indio Dejá el Mezcal [Indian, quit consuming mezcal]
  12. Huelga de Amores [Loves On Strike]
  13. Tajo C [literally: Slash C, but it sounds as a colloquial way of asking Is José there?]
  14. Pestaña de Camello [Camel Eyelash]
gollark: Perhaps both!
gollark: So simulate mouse movement, apioβ.
gollark: Perhaps we could make money by making an automatic captcha solving AI.
gollark: Hmm, interesting! They could probably be procedurally generated.
gollark: Well, not literal interest, whatever.

References

  1. Polimeni, Carlos: Bailando sobre los escombros: historia crítica del rock latinoamericano, Editorial Biblos, 2002, p. 87.
    Lunardelli, Laura: Alternatividad, divino tesoro: el rock argentino en los 90, Editorial Biblos, 2002, p. 63.
  2. ¡Compre Nacional! Fronteras Cerradas en el Rock de los 90
  3. "Los 100 mejores discos del rock nacional". Rolling Stone Argentina (in Spanish). Publirevistas S. A. April 2007.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.