Héroes del Silencio

Héroes del Silencio (Spanish: Heroes of Silence) (well known as Héroes or HDS) was a Spanish rock band from Zaragoza, Aragón, Spain, formed by guitarist Juan Valdivia and singer Enrique Bunbury. The lineup was completed by bassist Joaquin Cardiel and drummer Pedro Andreu. During the 1980s they experienced success around Spain and the Americas, and in various European countries including Germany, Belgium, Switzerland, France, Yugoslavia and Portugal. They established themselves as one of the major contributors to the Rock en Español scene and are considered to be one of the all-time best bands in that genre.[1] Their trademarks are their well-crafted lyrics, complicated arrangements and impeccable rhythm.[2] After twelve years and numerous albums, the band broke up in 1996. When the lead singer Enrique Bunbury started a solo project, other members of the band also followed a different musical path. In 2007, as part of a 20-year anniversary celebration and 11 years after their break-up, they organized a 10-concert world tour.

Héroes del Silencio
Héroes del Silencio
Background information
OriginZaragoza, Aragon, Spain
GenresRock, hard rock, Gothic rock, post-punk
Years active1984 – 1996, 2007
LabelsEMI
Associated actsZumo de Vidrio
MembersEnrique Bunbury (vocals, acoustic guitar, harmonica)
Juan Valdivia (lead guitar)
Joaquin Cardiel
(bass, backing vocals)
Pedro Andreu (drums)
Past membersAlan Boguslavsky
Gonzalo Valdivia

The band's distinctiveness was a very characteristic image with a very particular iconography and symbology, and a music characterized by ambiguous and transcendental lyrics, complicated arpeggios and a solid rhythmic base. Among its influences are William Blake, Charles Baudelaire, Led Zeppelin, and The Cult.[3][4]

History

Overview

Héroes del Silencio started in 1984 as a band named Zumo de Vidrio consisting of Juan Valdivia, his brother Pedro Valdivia and their cousin Javier Guajardo Valdivia. Later Enrique Bunbury joined the line-up. Bunbury was originally a bass player but after Juan Valdivia heard him sing a David Bowie song, Bunbury became the vocalist.

The band changed their name in 1985 to Héroes del Silencio. At first they played in public places and made demo recordings but their breakthrough came when they participated in a music contest in Salamanca and won second place. An EMI producer, Gustavo Montesano, saw the band in the contest and at a later concert in Sala En Bruto, he signed the band.

Their first EP, Héroe de Leyenda, was released in 1987 and sold 30,000 copies. The following year, the album El Mar No Cesa was released, featuring the songs "Mar Adentro", "Agosto" and "El Estanque", and sold 100,000 copies. The supporting tour followed in 1989, documented on the limited edition live album En Directo.

In 1990 they released Senderos de Traición, their best-selling album with 2 million copies, including 400,000 copies in the first two weeks in Spain alone. The following year they started the tour Senda 91 and released another live album, Senda '91. In 1993 the band released the most important CD in their career, El Espíritu del Vino. 600,000 copies of this album, which was played throughout America, were sold. They followed this with a tour for El Espíritu del Vino. In 1993, Alan Boguslavsky joined the band.

Due to tensions within the band, Héroes del Silencio took a hiatus and went to Benasque to take a vacation and heal the rifts within the group. After this break they acquired a new producer, Bob Ezrin (Lou Reed, Pink Floyd, Peter Gabriel, Alice Cooper, Kiss, etc.) and in 1995 released Avalancha. Avalancha was more hard rock than the previous albums, with songs like "Avalancha", "Deshacer el Mundo" and "Iberia Sumergida". The album was followed by the Avalancha tour in 1995 and 1996, which produced the live album "Para siempre".

The band split in 1996, though this did not stop the release of the album Rarezas in 1998.

Albums and tours

In 1988 Héroes recorded their first full-length album. El Mar No Cesa was a limited edition and all copies (30,000) were sold. The album was more pop-oriented than the band had originally wished, which made them perform live in a slightly more aggressive way so as to show the real potential of the band. A limited live album En Directo was later released capturing the energy of their concerts. In 1990 they went into the studio once again to work with producer Phil Manzanera on their second album, Senderos de Traición.[5]

In 1990 Senderos de Traición was a successful second release for Heroes, "combining Celtic guitars [and] metal rhythms."[5] The songs "Entre Dos Tierras" and "Maldito Duende" are still among the most popular of the band. The album was recorded in London, including English versions of "Entre Dos Tierras" and "Maldito Duende". It was decided though to not publish them. The tour for this album was called Senda like the song of the same name. It took the band to America and to various European countries including Germany and Belgium; winning several gold discs on their way. According to Bunbury, the tour represented the golden times of the band.[6] The live album Senda 91' was produced on this tour. When the band gave a concert in Mexico, they met Alan Boguslavsky who would later join the band. Senderos de Traición stayed in the album charts of countries like Spain,[7] Switzerland[8] and Germany.[9]

In 1993, after the success of Senderos de Traición, the band recorded their third album called El Espíritu del Vino which was produced by Phil Manzanera. The singles from the release were "Nuestros Nombres", "Flor de Loto", "Los Placeres De La Pobreza", "La Sirena Varada" and "La Herida" The album features hard rock and has a style similar to rock bands like Led Zeppelin, The Cult, The Mission, Fields of the Nephilim and Guns N' Roses. The songs "Nuestros Nombres" and "La Herida" reached position one in several European charts. Alan Boguslavsky joined the band in the tour named El Camino Del Exceso, during which they played in countries including Germany, Austria, Portugal, Italy, Mexico, Argentina, U.S.A, Chile, Finland and Hungary. The song "Nuestros Nombres" reached the first place in the "40 Principales",[10] being the first song of the band in a number one position. "La Sirena Varada" was the second song of Héroes del Silencio in "Los 40 Principales". The rest of the songs on the album got in the Top 10 of "Los 40 Principales" and on MTV.

"El Camino Del Exceso" meant in many ways the loss of compatibility between Bunbury and Valdivia.

In 1995 Héroes met Bob Ezrin, who produced the album Avalancha. This album was a new commercial success for the Héroes. Alan Boguslavsky, baptized "el Azteca de oro" (Spanish: The Golden Aztec), entered the band officially, being credited as co-composer of several songs although he did not appear in the promotional photos for the album. The album has a stronger rock style than any others before. Songs like "Iberia Sumergida" and "La Chispa Adecuada" came into the first position of the lists. The title track, "Avalancha", came in the first positions of charts like MTV. The tour was the most extensive one of the band. The final concert of Héroes del Silencio was meant to take place in Los Angeles but it was canceled because the crowd was angry at the band after rumors of their split. Héroes said goodbye in Spain with the mythical phrase: "Nos vemos en la gira del proximo milenio. Hasta Siempre [See you on tour in the next millennium. Farewell].".

Consecration and separation

At the Avalancha tour, the band participated in the Monsters of Rock of Brasil in 1996 as headliners. The concert was not recorded. The Héroes also got a special in MTV, like Unplugged and Gustock.

The "Tour macrogira Avalancha" from July 1995 to October 1996 led them to give 152 concerts in Europe and America. The coexistence during that time was difficult, and fatigue lead to increased internal conflicts. During this development, Bunbury started his own compositions and recorded new songs, hinting that his future was already far from Héroes del Silencio. Their last concert was in Los Angeles on 6 October 1996.

Before concluding the tour, and in a press conference in Lima, Peru, Héroes del Silencio reported their temporary separation. Apart from its environment, the news was surprising, but eventually came to transcend some of the reasons that had led to such a situation. The musical differences, especially between Juan and Enrique, had led them to a distance, and these differences became personal. The deaths of two persons very close to the group as well influenced the band's spirit: their road manager Martin Druille in 1993, and Enrique's brother, Rafael, in 1994. As remarked by Bunbury, the last months of the tour were an ordeal for him.

2007 Reunion tour

Héroes playing in Sevilla on October 2007

20 years after their first album, and 11 years after they split up, the band announced a ten-day reunion tour that would take them to Guatemala City, Buenos Aires, Monterrey, Ciudad de México, Los Angeles, Sevilla, Zaragoza and Valencia. For this tour guitarist Gonzalo Valdivia (Juan Valdivia's brother) replaced former band member Alan Boguslavsky.[11] More than 20,000 people attended each concert and some of the concerts saw as many as 90,000 fans (e.g. in Valencia, Ricardo Tormo's Stadium). The tour was followed by another live album, "Tour 2007".

After the tour, singer-songwriter Enrique Bunbury announced his new album, focusing in his solo career.[12]

Discography

Studio albums

Live recordings

Compilations

  • Rarezas (outtakes and rare versions) (1998)
  • Edición del Milenio (4-CD boxset) (1999)
  • Canciones 1984–1996 (2-CD set) (2000)
  • Antología Audiovisual (2004)
  • Héroes del Silencio: The Platinum Collection (3 CD, 2 DVD) (2006)

In other media

gollark: Or, well, the obvious alternative.
gollark: Maybe. On the one hand I at least like to think I'm vaguely better than average at actually paying attention to explanations for things and won't just immediately consign them to "outgroup → bad" or "not convention → bad". On the other hand probably most people think that since people are bad at comparing things. On the third hand, which I totally have, the alternative is to just assume people doing things are probably right, which seems wrong.
gollark: No, which is why I said I didn't care that much.
gollark: > that might be valid but itS' also an easy to abuse excuse to dislike almost anything> because you can always say that you don't see the pointThis is typically why people explain things.
gollark: I don't care a huge amount either way, but it's vaguely weird.

See also

References

  1. Roberto Gascon. "Especial RS: Los 50 mejores grupos de rock español". Rolling Stone España. Archived from the original on 3 July 2015.
  2. "Héroes del Silencio, la banda de rock en español que no siguió estereotipos – SEP. 13, 2004 – Música – Historicos – EL UNIVERSO".
  3. "Héroes del Silencio anuncian su regreso con una gira mundial". 20 minutos. 14 February 2007.
  4. "Héroes del Silencio: 20 años de 'Senderos de traición'". Rolling Stone España. Archived from the original on 16 September 2011.
  5. O'Brien, Jon. Senderos de Traicion at AllMusic. Retrieved 2011-03-30.
  6. Tesón, Nuria; Manrique Núñez, Darío; Manrique, Diego A.; Héroes del Silencio (2007). Héroes del silencio : Senderos de traición (in Spanish). Madrid: Diario El País. p. 21. ISBN 9788498158373.
  7. "Heroes Del Silencio". spanishcharts.com. Hung Medien. Archived from the original on 10 October 2012. Retrieved 30 March 2011.
  8. "Heroes del Silencio". Die offizielle Schweizer Hitparade (in German). Hung Medien. Archived from the original on 20 March 2012. Retrieved 30 March 2011.
  9. "Chartverfolgung / Heroes Del Silencio / Longplay". musicline.de (in German). PHONONET GmbH. Retrieved 30 March 2011.
  10. Salaverri, Fernando (September 2005). Sólo éxitos: año a año, 1959–2002 (1st ed.). Spain: Fundación Autor-SGAE. ISBN 84-8048-639-2.
  11. (In Spanish) Archived 2 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  12. Bunbury anuncia el final definitivo de Heroes del Silencio (In Spanish)
  13. "Heroes del Silencio – Live in Germany (album)". spanishcharts.com. Hung Medien. Retrieved 21 March 2012.
  14. "Guitar Hero 3 Setlist Revealed". PC World. 26 October 2007. Retrieved 30 August 2010.
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