Rolling Stone Argentina's The 100 Greatest Albums of National Rock

The 100 Greatest Albums of National Rock (Spanish: Los 100 mejores discos del rock nacional) is a 2007 special issue of Rolling Stone Argentina, the local edition of the American magazine that is published monthly by S.A. La Nación. It was made available in newsstands on April 3.[1] That month, Rolling Stone Argentina was issued as a special "double anniversary edition", with the list being released alongside the magazine's usual publication. The issue celebrated the forty years of Argentine rock and the nine years of Rolling Stone Argentina.[2] In 2013, a revised "bookazine" edition of the list was released, incorporating more albums from the 2000s.[3]

Magazine cover of the first edition of Rolling Stone Argentina's "The 100 Greatest Albums of National Rock".

The list focuses on Argentine rock, which is locally known as rock nacional (Spanish for "national rock") and is considered a distinct style of rock music, born in the late 1960s in Buenos Aires at a time when the city was experiencing a cultural blossoming.[4] Rock nacional has been defined as "fusion music of various rhythms, completely identifiable as belonging to the urban areas of the country. It is a synthesis of the original [rock] with other expressions that, in the opinion of the foreigners, sometimes sounds like tango or [folk music]."[5] Although rock and roll already existed in Argentina, the countercultural, young bohemians of Buenos Aires were the first to create a local version of rock that spoke of their own concerns, with the particularity of featuring Spanish lyrics at a time when it was frowned upon.[4][6][7] The release of Los Gatos' debut single, "La balsa" on July 3, 1967 is generally considered to be the origin of the movement, as it established its commercial viability and turned it into a widespread youth culture phenomenon.[8] For this reason, The 100 Greatest Albums of National Rock only includes records released after "La balsa", and was issued in commemoration of the forty years of the single's release or, in other words, the fortyth anniversary of the genre.[2]

The number one album was Artaud by Luis Alberto Spinetta (credited to Pescado Rabioso).[9]

Background

Made in a similar fashion to Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, the list was voted for by 180 people related to the genre, including musicians, journalists, photographers and members of the recording industry.[10] Each album entry is accompanied by a journalist commentary, with the exception of Clics modernos, which Charly García wrote himself.[2]

List statistics

In the original 2007 list, Charly García (left) and Luis Alberto Spinetta (right) were the artists with the most albums included.

Among the first twenty albums selected, nine were recorded before 1983, the year Argentina's last military dictatorship ended.[11]

Number of albums from each of the decades in the 2007 list
  • 1960s: 1
  • 1970s: 31
  • 1980s: 32
  • 1990s: 29
  • 2000s: 7
Number of albums from each of the decades in the 2013 list
  • 1960s: 1
  • 1970s: 27
  • 1980s: 29
  • 1990s: 27
  • 2000s: 16
Artists with the most albums in the 2013 list

See also

References

  1. "Los 100 mejores discos del rock nacional". Rolling Stone Argentina (in Spanish). S.A. La Nación. April 3, 2007.
  2. "Artaud es el mejor disco de rock local". La Nación (in Spanish). S.A. La Nación. April 2, 2007. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
  3. "Los 100 mejores discos del rock nacional". Rolling Stone Argentina (in Spanish). S.A. La Nación. June 2013. ISBN 9789871690442.
  4. Gaffet, Hernán (Director) (2006). Argentina Beat (Documentary film) (in Spanish). Buenos Aires, Argentina: Produced by Poleri-Foligna-Gaffet. Published on YouTube by Claudio Gabis' Gabispace. Retrieved April 16, 2018.
  5. "Sitios de interés cultural: La Perla del Once" (in Spanish). Government of the City of Buenos Aires. Retrieved December 26, 2016.
  6. Neumeyer, Lily (Producer) (December 12, 1996). Mejor hablar de ciertas cosas: Pequeñas historias del rock argentino (Television documentary) (in Spanish). MTV Latin America. LSPE008.
  7. González, Yanko (2013). La construcción histórica de la juventud en América Latina: Bohemios, Rockanroleros y Revolucionarios (in Spanish). Cuarto Propio. p. 241. ISBN 978-9562606400.
  8. Alabarces, Pablo (November 1, 1993). Entre gatos y violadores: el rock nacional en la cultura argentina (in Spanish). Colihue. pp. 43–45. ISBN 9505812434.
  9. Schanton, Pablo (May 29, 2007). "Artaud". Rolling Stone Argentina (in Spanish). S.A. La Nación. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
  10. "100 mejores discos del rock nacional". La Nación (in Spanish). S.A. La Nación. April 13, 2007. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
  11. Pujol, Sergio (June 2015). "Escúchame, alúmbrame. Apuntes sobre el canon de "la música joven" argentina entre 1966 y 1973". Apuntes de investigación del CECYP (in Spanish). Buenos Aires, Argentina: Centro de Estudios en Cultura y Política (CECYP). ISSN 1851-9814. Retrieved January 30, 2016.
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