Biografia De Gustavo Cerati En Ingles
Hisearly guitar lessons quickly paid off when he met his fellow band-members Zeta Bosio and Charly Alberti, to give shape to what was soon to become the main Spanish-speaking band in the Americas: SodaStereo, a trio with Cerati being the leading voice and also playing guitars.
It was 1985 when Soda Stereo jumped into the spotlight in Argentina, to later start their successful career abroad.
Theirsongs, a mix of pop-rock with elegant lyrics and a funky vibe, reached the top of the charts all over Latin America, achieving a continental success that has not been paired ever since. With atop-notch sense of aesthetics, they performed all over the continent, from intimate sessions in underground pubs to carefully-staged massive concerts in open-air stadiums.
Soda Stereo was signed to CBS in1983. They published their first album, "Soda Stereo", in 1984, soon followed by the hugely successful "Nada Personal" (1985). With "Signos" (1986), they started touring the main Latin Americancities, paving the way for a continental Sodamania, as the devotion that this band generated in hundreds of thousands of fans all over the region has been named. This phenomenon opened the market forArgentinian music, arguably the most influential from of "local" rock in Latin American from those days onwards.
Later came "Ruido Blanco" (1987), and "Doble Vida" (1988), the album that confirmed therole of Soda Stereo as an international band, with all-time hits such as "Lo que sangra" and "En la ciudad de la furia". "Canción Animal" (1990), in turn, opened the doors of the Spanish market playingin cities like Sevilla, Madrid, Barcelona, y Valencia. The group would close the year with a historical free concert in downtown Buenos Aires, for a crowd of more than 250,000 people.
"Dynamo" was...
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