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]
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
- Salir a Asustar [Go Out To Scare]
- Ortega y Gases [Wordplay on Spanish philosopher Ortega y Gasset's last name and the word gases (farts)]
- El Arriero (original by Atahualpa Yupanqui) [The Muleteer]
- Salir a Comprar [Go Out To Buy]
- ¿Qué Ves? [What Do You See?]
- Pestaña de Camello [Camel Eyelash]
- Rasputín/Hey Jude
- Dame un Limón [Give Me A Lemon]
- Paisano de Hurlingham [Hurlingham Dude]
- Cristófolo Cacarnú
- Indio Dejá el Mezcal [Indian, quit consuming mezcal]
- Huelga de Amores [Loves On Strike]
- Tajo C [literally: Slash C, but it sounds as a colloquial way of asking Is José there?]
- Pestaña de Camello [Camel Eyelash]
Personnel
- Photography - Alejandra Palacios
- Graphic Design - Alicia Murlender
- Recording Equipment - Andy Brauer
- Hammond Organ, Producer, Vibraphone - Anibal Kerpel
- Composer - Atahualpa Yupanqui
- Trombone - Bruce Fowler
- Engineer - Craig Porteils
- Assistant - Danny Alonso
- Composer - Diego Arnedo
- Primary Artist - Divididos
- Engineer - Doug Schwarz
- Assistant - Gabriel Sutter
- Charango, Composer, Coro, Percussion, Producer - Gustavo Santaolalla
- Composer - John Lennon
- Percussion - Luis Conte
- Cello - Melissa Hasin
- Composer - Paul McCartney
- Composer - Ricardo Mollo
- Engineer - Tony Peluso
Sales
References
- ^ 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.
- ^ ¡Compre Nacional! Fronteras Cerradas en el Rock de los 90
- ^ "Los 100 mejores discos del rock nacional". Rolling Stone Argentina (in Spanish). Publirevistas S. A. April 2007.
- ^ "Top 30". Página 12 (in Spanish). January 12, 1995. p. 4. Retrieved 27 March 2025.
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