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Álbums chronology

Sueno Stereo
Sueno Stereo
21/6/1995

Sueno Stereo

Soda Stereo

1995 Estudio
  • Fecha Lanzamiento: 21 Junio 1995 · Fecha Grabación: 1994 -
    Discográfica: Sony BMGAriola · Estudio de grabación: Estudios Supersónico, Buenos AiresMatrix, London · Productor: Gustavo Cerati , Zeta Bosio
    1
    4:29
  • 2
    Disco eterno
    Soda Stereo • 1995
    5:46
  • 3
    Zoom
    Soda Stereo • 1995
    3:26
  • 4
    Ojo de la tormenta
    Soda Stereo • 1995
    4:33
  • 5
    Efecto doppler
    Soda Stereo • 1995
    5:01
  • 6
    Paseando por Roma
    Soda Stereo • 1995
    3:34
  • 7
    Pasos
    Soda Stereo • 1995
    3:53
  • 8
    Angel eléctrico
    Soda Stereo • 1995
    4:35
  • 9
    Crema de estrellas
    Soda Stereo • 1995
    4:37
  • 10
    Planta
    Soda Stereo • 1995
    4:52
  • 11
    X
    Soda Stereo • 1995
    4:07
  • 12
    Moirè
    Soda Stereo • 1995
    4:02
  • Singles


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    Sueño Stereo
    Studio album by
    Released21 June 1995
    Recorded1994–1995
    StudioEstudios Supersónico, Buenos Aires
    Matrix, London
    Genre
    Length53:08
    Label
    Producer
    Soda Stereo chronology
    Zona de Promesas
    (1993)
    Sueño Stereo
    (1995)
    Comfort y Música Para Volar
    (1996)
    Singles from Sueño Stereo
    1. "Ella usó mi cabeza como un revólver"
      Released: 1995
    2. "Zoom"
      Released: 1995
    3. "Disco eterno"
      Released: 1996
    4. "Paseando por Roma"
      Released: 1996

    Review

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    (Redirected from Sueno Stereo)

    Leer más

    1995 studio album by Soda Stereo

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[1]
    Rolling StoneBest Albums in Latin Rock History - 4th[2]

    Sueño Stereo (Spanish for Stereo Dream) is the seventh and final studio album recorded by Argentine rock band Soda Stereo. It was released by BMG Argentina in 1995. It is considered one of the most important alternative rock records in Spanish and one of the most successful and most important by the band and in all of Latin rock. Rolling Stone considered it the fourth-best in Latin rock history.[3]

    In just fifteen days of sales in Latin America, the album went platinum.[4] The album was the centerpiece of the extensive Sueño Stereo tour that the band undertook in Venezuela, Colombia, Perú, Chile, Honduras, Panamá, Costa Rica, México and the United States, which began on September 8, 1995, in Buenos Aires, and ended on 24 April 1996 in Santiago de Chile.

    During the 1996 MTV Video Music Awards, the music video for "Ella usó mi cabeza como un revólver", directed by Stanley Gonczanski, won the Award for International Viewer`s Choice in the MTV Latin America category, being the first award of the kind given to a Latin American band.

    Background

    Although Soda Stereo were known by mixing many styles and genres inside a same album, this record goes beyond and it has many more different sounds and influences, like pop, pop rock, alternative rock, dream pop, Britpop, electronic, shoegaze, progressive rock, psychedelic pop or ambient pop. Sueño Stereo was heavily inspired by The Beatles`s Revolver (1966) and contains many references to it, such as the colors on the album cover; a song with the word "Revolver" in it, the lead single "Ella usó mi cabeza como un revólver"; and songs like "Paseando por Roma", which has a bass line based on "Taxman" and strings in the chorus based on "Got to Get You into My Life", as well as the B-side "Superstar" which is based on "She Said She Said". In 1995 they traveled to London, UK, to make the final mix of the album, and in an interview they spoke about the Beatles influence throughout their career.

    Tracks 9 through 12 in the second half of the album – "Crema de Estrellas", "Planta", "X-Playo", and "Moirè" – are musically strung together, forming a medley likened by Cerati to a "little concept album". The lyrics of the song refer to a drug trip, inspired by Cerati`s experiences with ayahuasca, and follow each other chronologically.

    Track listing

    All lyrics are written by Gustavo Cerati

    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    1."Ella Usó Mi Cabeza Como un Revólver"
    • Cerati
    • Zeta Bosio
    • Charly Alberti
    4:32
    2."Disco Eterno"
    • Cerati
    • Bosio
    • Alberti
    5:46
    3."Zoom"Cerati3:27
    4."Ojo de la Tormenta"Cerati4:33
    5."Efecto Doppler"Cerati5:03
    6."Paseando por Roma"
    • Cerati
    • Bosio
    • Alberti
    3:35
    7."Pasos"Cerati3:54
    8."Ángel Eléctrico"
    • Cerati
    • Bosio
    • Alberti
    4:36
    9."Crema de Estrellas"Cerati4:37
    10."Planta"
    • Cerati
    • Bosio
    4:52
    11."X-Playo"Cerati4:07
    12."Moirè"Cerati4:02
    Total length:53:08

    Personnel

    Soda Stereo:

    • Gustavo Cerati – lead vocals, guitar, fretless bass guitar, Rhodes piano, synthesizers, producer
    • Zeta Bosio – bass guitar, backing vocals, synthesizers, harmonica, producer
    • Charly Alberti – drums, percussion

    Additional personnel:

    • Alejandro Terán – viola
    • Janos Morel – first violin
    • Mauricio Alves – second violin
    • Pablo Flumetti – cello
    • Roy Málaga – piano
    • Flavio Etcheto – trumpet

    Certifications

    Region

    CertificationCertified units/sales

    Argentina (CAPIF)[4]

    2× Platinum

    120,000^

    United States (RIAA)[5]

    Gold (Latin)

    30,000‡

    ^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.
    ‡ Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    (Redirected from Sueno Stereo)

    1995 studio album by Soda Stereo

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[1]
    Rolling StoneBest Albums in Latin Rock History - 4th[2]

    Sueño Stereo (Spanish for Stereo Dream) is the seventh and final studio album recorded by Argentine rock band Soda Stereo. It was released by BMG Argentina in 1995. It is considered one of the most important alternative rock records in Spanish and one of the most successful and most important by the band and in all of Latin rock. Rolling Stone considered it the fourth-best in Latin rock history.[3]

    In just fifteen days of sales in Latin America, the album went platinum.[4] The album was the centerpiece of the extensive Sueño Stereo tour that the band undertook in Venezuela, Colombia, Perú, Chile, Honduras, Panamá, Costa Rica, México and the United States, which began on September 8, 1995, in Buenos Aires, and ended on 24 April 1996 in Santiago de Chile.

    During the 1996 MTV Video Music Awards, the music video for "Ella usó mi cabeza como un revólver", directed by Stanley Gonczanski, won the Award for International Viewer`s Choice in the MTV Latin America category, being the first award of the kind given to a Latin American band.

    Background

    Although Soda Stereo were known by mixing many styles and genres inside a same album, this record goes beyond and it has many more different sounds and influences, like pop, pop rock, alternative rock, dream pop, Britpop, electronic, shoegaze, progressive rock, psychedelic pop or ambient pop. Sueño Stereo was heavily inspired by The Beatles`s Revolver (1966) and contains many references to it, such as the colors on the album cover; a song with the word "Revolver" in it, the lead single "Ella usó mi cabeza como un revólver"; and songs like "Paseando por Roma", which has a bass line based on "Taxman" and strings in the chorus based on "Got to Get You into My Life", as well as the B-side "Superstar" which is based on "She Said She Said". In 1995 they traveled to London, UK, to make the final mix of the album, and in an interview they spoke about the Beatles influence throughout their career.

    Tracks 9 through 12 in the second half of the album – "Crema de Estrellas", "Planta", "X-Playo", and "Moirè" – are musically strung together, forming a medley likened by Cerati to a "little concept album". The lyrics of the song refer to a drug trip, inspired by Cerati`s experiences with ayahuasca, and follow each other chronologically.

    Track listing

    All lyrics are written by Gustavo Cerati

    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    1."Ella Usó Mi Cabeza Como un Revólver"
    • Cerati
    • Zeta Bosio
    • Charly Alberti
    4:32
    2."Disco Eterno"
    • Cerati
    • Bosio
    • Alberti
    5:46
    3."Zoom"Cerati3:27
    4."Ojo de la Tormenta"Cerati4:33
    5."Efecto Doppler"Cerati5:03
    6."Paseando por Roma"
    • Cerati
    • Bosio
    • Alberti
    3:35
    7."Pasos"Cerati3:54
    8."Ángel Eléctrico"
    • Cerati
    • Bosio
    • Alberti
    4:36
    9."Crema de Estrellas"Cerati4:37
    10."Planta"
    • Cerati
    • Bosio
    4:52
    11."X-Playo"Cerati4:07
    12."Moirè"Cerati4:02
    Total length:53:08

    Personnel

    Soda Stereo:

    • Gustavo Cerati – lead vocals, guitar, fretless bass guitar, Rhodes piano, synthesizers, producer
    • Zeta Bosio – bass guitar, backing vocals, synthesizers, harmonica, producer
    • Charly Alberti – drums, percussion

    Additional personnel:

    • Alejandro Terán – viola
    • Janos Morel – first violin
    • Mauricio Alves – second violin
    • Pablo Flumetti – cello
    • Roy Málaga – piano
    • Flavio Etcheto – trumpet

    Certifications

    Region

    CertificationCertified units/sales

    Argentina (CAPIF)[4]

    2× Platinum

    120,000^

    United States (RIAA)[5]

    Gold (Latin)

    30,000‡

    ^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.
    ‡ Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

    DISCOGRAFÍA

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