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Álbums chronology

Soda Stereo
Soda Stereo
27/8/1984
Nada Personal
Nada Personal
21/11/1985
Signos
Signos
10/11/1986

Nada Personal

Soda Stereo

1985 Estudio
  • Fecha Lanzamiento: 21 Noviembre 1985 · Fecha Grabación: Noviembre 1985 -
    Discográfica: Discos CBS · · Productor: Soda Stereo
    1
    Nada personal
    Soda Stereo • 1985
    4:52
  • 2
    Si no fuera por
    Soda Stereo • 1985
    3:27
  • 3
    Cuando pase el temblor
    Soda Stereo • 1985
    3:48
  • 4
    Danza rota
    Soda Stereo • 1985
    3:31
  • 5
    El cuerpo del delito
    Soda Stereo • 1985
    3:46
  • 6
    Juego de seducción
    Soda Stereo • 1985
    3:17
  • 7
    Estoy azulado
    Soda Stereo • 1985
    5:17
  • 8
    Observándonos (satélites)
    Soda Stereo • 1985
    3:06
  • 9
    Imágenes retro
    Soda Stereo • 1985
    3:49
  • 10
    Ecos
    Soda Stereo • 1985
    4:57
  • Singles


    No se encontraron resultados

    Singles

    Soda Stereo
    Soda Stereo
    27/8/1984
    Nada Personal
    Nada Personal
    21/11/1985
    Signos
    Signos
    10/11/1986
    Nada Personal
    Studio album by
    ReleasedNovember 21, 1985
    RecordedEstudios Moebio, Buenos Aires, 1985
    GenreNew wave
    Length40:28
    LabelDiscos CBS
    ProducerSoda Stereo
    Soda Stereo chronology
    Soda Stereo
    (1984)
    Nada Personal
    (1985)
    Signos
    (1986)
    Singles from Nada personal
    1. "Imágenes Retro"
      Released: January 1985 (ARG)
    2. "Nada Personal"
      Released: October 4, 1985
    3. "Cuando pase el temblor"
      Released: October 30, 1985 (CR)
    4. "Juegos de Seducción"
      Released: December 2, 1985

    Review

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Leer más

    1985 studio album by Soda Stereo

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[1]

    Nada Personal (Spanish for "Nothing Personal") is the second album recorded by Argentine rock band Soda Stereo, released in 1985. It was recorded at Estudios Moebio in Buenos Aires, Argentina and remastered in 2007 at Sterling Sound Studios in New York.

    Nada Personal provided the band with at least three successful singles, which became the breakout songs for the band all over Hispano-America. The album showed Soda Stereo venturing in a new musical direction focused mainly on the British New Wave style. The most successful singles from the album were "Juegos De Seducción" (Games of Seduction/Seduction Games), "Nada Personal" (Nothing Personal) and "Cuando pase el temblor" (When the Earthquake Ends). Those songs enjoyed strong airplay during 1985 and 1986, primarily in Argentina, Mexico, Uruguay and Chile.

    Such successful songs were performed live twice at the Viña del Mar International Song Festival held in Chile in February, 1987. Many people (including music journalists) consider these two shows very historic.[2][3]

    Background

    The album was recorded and mixed at the Moebio studios in Buenos Aires (Argentina) with technician Mariano López as sound engineer.

    Nada Personal also presents, in some songs, the band`s intention to explore new sounds, as in "Estoy Azulado", a song that begins with a climactic sax introduction by Gonzalo Palacios, and in "Cuando pase el temblor", a song that mixes rock with Andean music typical of northwestern Argentina. Without abandoning "danceable" rhythms, this second LP achieved more depth in the lyrics and maturity in the melodies.

    Well received by critics, it meant a huge increase in popularity for the band. In Argentina alone, it sold around 180,000 copies in the first few months. The disc meant the definitive consecration of Soda Stereo before the Argentine public.

    In April 1986, Soda Stereo recorded a video clip of the song "Cuando pase el temblor" in the ruins of Pucará, in Tilcara, Jujuy, under the direction of Alfredo Lois.

    Gustavo Cerati comments on the album:

    "The advent of reverberation chambers and eighties sound tricks. On this record I started to learn how to make songs."

    Promotion

    During the southern summer of 1986, the group toured Argentine tourist centers to promote the album, playing in Mar del Plata, Villa Gesell and Pinamar, also adding a consecration concert at the La Falda Festival, in Córdoba, which featured the participation of Andrés Calamaro and Charly García as guest keyboardists on the song " ?Por qué no puedo ser del Jet-Set?".

    In April 1986, 22,000 spectators burst through the four performances that served to officially present the album at the Obras Sanitarias Stadium in Buenos Aires. In the first of the functions, a lengthy live video was recorded. This video would be called Nada Personal en Obras and would be edited months later.

    After the concerts performed at Obras, the album`s sales began to grow rapidly, rising from gold (which they had achieved during the summer) to platinum, and reaching double that figure in the following months.

    At the end of that same year, the band`s first Latin American tour took place, covering Colombia, Ecuador, Perú, Chile, Venezuela and Paraguay.

    Track listing

    All music is composed by Gustavo Cerati, except where noted.

    Nada Personal track listing
    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    1."Nada Personal" ("Nothing Personal")Cerati4:57
    2."Si No Fuera Por..." ("If It Wasn`t For...")Cerati, Bosio, Alberti3:29
    3."Cuando Pase el Temblor" ("When The Shaking Is Past"(***))Cerati3:48
    4."Danza Rota" ("Broken Dance")Cerati3:35
    5."El Cuerpo del Delito" ("Corpus Delicti")Cerati, Bosio3:50
    6."Juego de Seducción" ("Game of Seduction"(***))Cerati3:21
    7."Estoy Azulado" ("I`m Blue")Cerati, Coleman5:21
    8."Observándonos (Satélites)" ("Observing Us (Satellites))Cerati, Bosio (*)3:09
    9."Imágenes Retro" ("Retro Images")Cerati, Alberti (**)3:55
    10."Ecos" ("Echos")Cerati4:58
    Total length:39:51

    Notes

    • (*) Charly Alberti was credited as a songwriter on the vinyl tracklist.
    • (**) Charly Alberti was credited as a songwriter on the CD and cassette tracklist.
    • (***) There are recorded versions of both "Cuando Pase el Temblor" and "Juego de Seducción" in English from when the band tried to expand to the English-speaking world, but the idea was discarded and the songs became lost media.
    • In the remastered CD edition in 2007, the musician appears in the song "Observándonos (Satélites)" (*), because the vinyl prints have been copied to the design of said remastering.

    Personnel

    Soda Stereo

    • Gustavo Cerati – Lead Vocals, Guitars
    • Zeta Bosio – Bass guitar, Backing Vocals
    • Charly Alberti – Drums, Percussion

    Additional personnel

    • Fabian Vön Quintiero – Keyboards
    • Gonzalo Palacios – Sax
    • Produced by Soda Stereo

    Sales and certifications

    Region

    CertificationCertified units/sales

    Argentina (CAPIF)[4]
    sales as of 1987

    2× Platinum

    130,000[5]

    Chile[4]

    3× Platinum

    60,000[4]

    Colombia[4]

    Gold

    35,000[4]

    Peru[4]

    Platinum

    20,000[4]

    Venezuela[4]

    Gold

    10,000[4]

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    1985 studio album by Soda Stereo

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[1]

    Nada Personal (Spanish for "Nothing Personal") is the second album recorded by Argentine rock band Soda Stereo, released in 1985. It was recorded at Estudios Moebio in Buenos Aires, Argentina and remastered in 2007 at Sterling Sound Studios in New York.

    Nada Personal provided the band with at least three successful singles, which became the breakout songs for the band all over Hispano-America. The album showed Soda Stereo venturing in a new musical direction focused mainly on the British New Wave style. The most successful singles from the album were "Juegos De Seducción" (Games of Seduction/Seduction Games), "Nada Personal" (Nothing Personal) and "Cuando pase el temblor" (When the Earthquake Ends). Those songs enjoyed strong airplay during 1985 and 1986, primarily in Argentina, Mexico, Uruguay and Chile.

    Such successful songs were performed live twice at the Viña del Mar International Song Festival held in Chile in February, 1987. Many people (including music journalists) consider these two shows very historic.[2][3]

    Background

    The album was recorded and mixed at the Moebio studios in Buenos Aires (Argentina) with technician Mariano López as sound engineer.

    Nada Personal also presents, in some songs, the band`s intention to explore new sounds, as in "Estoy Azulado", a song that begins with a climactic sax introduction by Gonzalo Palacios, and in "Cuando pase el temblor", a song that mixes rock with Andean music typical of northwestern Argentina. Without abandoning "danceable" rhythms, this second LP achieved more depth in the lyrics and maturity in the melodies.

    Well received by critics, it meant a huge increase in popularity for the band. In Argentina alone, it sold around 180,000 copies in the first few months. The disc meant the definitive consecration of Soda Stereo before the Argentine public.

    In April 1986, Soda Stereo recorded a video clip of the song "Cuando pase el temblor" in the ruins of Pucará, in Tilcara, Jujuy, under the direction of Alfredo Lois.

    Gustavo Cerati comments on the album:

    "The advent of reverberation chambers and eighties sound tricks. On this record I started to learn how to make songs."

    Promotion

    During the southern summer of 1986, the group toured Argentine tourist centers to promote the album, playing in Mar del Plata, Villa Gesell and Pinamar, also adding a consecration concert at the La Falda Festival, in Córdoba, which featured the participation of Andrés Calamaro and Charly García as guest keyboardists on the song " ?Por qué no puedo ser del Jet-Set?".

    In April 1986, 22,000 spectators burst through the four performances that served to officially present the album at the Obras Sanitarias Stadium in Buenos Aires. In the first of the functions, a lengthy live video was recorded. This video would be called Nada Personal en Obras and would be edited months later.

    After the concerts performed at Obras, the album`s sales began to grow rapidly, rising from gold (which they had achieved during the summer) to platinum, and reaching double that figure in the following months.

    At the end of that same year, the band`s first Latin American tour took place, covering Colombia, Ecuador, Perú, Chile, Venezuela and Paraguay.

    Track listing

    All music is composed by Gustavo Cerati, except where noted.

    Nada Personal track listing
    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    1."Nada Personal" ("Nothing Personal")Cerati4:57
    2."Si No Fuera Por..." ("If It Wasn`t For...")Cerati, Bosio, Alberti3:29
    3."Cuando Pase el Temblor" ("When The Shaking Is Past"(***))Cerati3:48
    4."Danza Rota" ("Broken Dance")Cerati3:35
    5."El Cuerpo del Delito" ("Corpus Delicti")Cerati, Bosio3:50
    6."Juego de Seducción" ("Game of Seduction"(***))Cerati3:21
    7."Estoy Azulado" ("I`m Blue")Cerati, Coleman5:21
    8."Observándonos (Satélites)" ("Observing Us (Satellites))Cerati, Bosio (*)3:09
    9."Imágenes Retro" ("Retro Images")Cerati, Alberti (**)3:55
    10."Ecos" ("Echos")Cerati4:58
    Total length:39:51

    Notes

    • (*) Charly Alberti was credited as a songwriter on the vinyl tracklist.
    • (**) Charly Alberti was credited as a songwriter on the CD and cassette tracklist.
    • (***) There are recorded versions of both "Cuando Pase el Temblor" and "Juego de Seducción" in English from when the band tried to expand to the English-speaking world, but the idea was discarded and the songs became lost media.
    • In the remastered CD edition in 2007, the musician appears in the song "Observándonos (Satélites)" (*), because the vinyl prints have been copied to the design of said remastering.

    Personnel

    Soda Stereo

    • Gustavo Cerati – Lead Vocals, Guitars
    • Zeta Bosio – Bass guitar, Backing Vocals
    • Charly Alberti – Drums, Percussion

    Additional personnel

    • Fabian Vön Quintiero – Keyboards
    • Gonzalo Palacios – Sax
    • Produced by Soda Stereo

    Sales and certifications

    Region

    CertificationCertified units/sales

    Argentina (CAPIF)[4]
    sales as of 1987

    2× Platinum

    130,000[5]

    Chile[4]

    3× Platinum

    60,000[4]

    Colombia[4]

    Gold

    35,000[4]

    Peru[4]

    Platinum

    20,000[4]

    Venezuela[4]

    Gold

    10,000[4]

    DISCOGRAFÍA

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