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All rights reserved.| Track Listing 1. La Vida 2. CJ 3. Los Condenaditos 4. Cebolla 5. El Nadador 6. Vos Sabes 7. Pirana 8. Todos Los Argentinos Somos DT 9. El Baile De La Mar 10. Roble 11. La Rosca 12. La Marcha Del Golazo Solitario 13. Aguila 14. Salvador Y Los Cordones Flojos 15. Necesito Una Nariz De Payaso 16. No Me Pretas La Tuya 17. Negra 18. 57 Almas 19. Alamo
Album Notes Los Fabulosos Cadillacs: Ariel Minimal (acoustic & electric guitars, Guitarra Criolla); Fernando Albareda (flute, trombone, tuba, background vocals); Daniel Lozano (trumpet, flugelhorn, background vocals); Mario Siperman (piano, Fender Rhodes piano, Hammond B-3 organ, synthesizer); Flavio Oscar Cianciarulo (bass, background vocals); Fernando Ricciardi (drums, percussion, background vocals); Gerardo Simon Rotblat "El Toto" (percussion, background vocals).Additional personnel: Gabriel Fernandez Capello (vocals, piano, organ, vibraphone); Claudio "Tano" Marcciello (electric guitar); Walter Castro (bandoneon); Bob Porter (trumpet); Karl Cameron Porter (piano, Fender Rhodes piano, Hammond B-3 organ; Arp string synthesizer, background vocals); Pablo Ziegler (piano); Norberto Minichillo (vibraphone, percussion); Darlene Koldenhoven (background vocals).Recorded at Estudios Del Abasto Al Pasto & Circo Beat, Buenos Aires, Argentina; WorldBeat Recording, Calabasas, Los Angeles, California.LA MARCHA DEL GOLAZO SOLITARIO was nominated for the 2000 Grammy Award for Best Latin Rock/Alternative Performance."La Vida" was nominated for the 2000 Latin Grammy Award for Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal.While they're generally considered part of the Rock en Espanol vanguard, these Argentine Grammy winners continue to dance happily around musical categories. With this in mind, it's best to file the K.C. Porter-produced MARCHA DEL GOLAZO SOLITARIO under "big, beautiful, and bizarre." Salsa, samba, jazz, punk, and rock all have a home in this 10-plus member Southern Cone freak machine, and the result is seamless as ever. And while the sinewy mass of bass, horns, guitar, and percussion makes quite a crunch, singer Gabriel "Vicentico" Capello and bassist Flavio Cianciarulo write songs that can be as lovely and subtle as they are thunderous.The ethereal, rippling "Cebolla, El Nadador" is a wacky cross between Brazilian lounge, film-noir detective music, and the theme to "C.H.I.P.S." Reminiscent of Queen's more grandiose music, "Roble" is a sweet, rousing song of autumn and spring cast in rich string passages. Roughly translated as "The March of the Solitary Soccer Goal," the title track is a crowning specimen of mutant magic, interpolating Monk's cherished "Rhythm-a-ning" into a wild marching fanfare with the band exclaiming in chorus, "The ball Fear Pleasure Pain" Editorial Reviews Entertainment Weekly (09/10/1999) | |||||||||||||
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