Artaud (album)

Artaud
Studio album by
ReleasedOctober 1973 (1973-10)
StudioPhonalex (Buenos Aires)
Genre
Length36:56
LanguageSpanish
LabelTalent-Microfón
Producer
Pescado Rabioso chronology
Pescado 2
(1973)
Artaud
(1973)
Luis Alberto Spinetta solo chronology
Spinettalandia y sus amigos
(1971)
Artaud
(1973)
A 18' del sol
(1977)
Singles from Artaud
  1. "Todas las hojas son del viento / Superchería"
    Released: 1973

Artaud (French: [aʁto]; commonly pronounced [aɾˈto] by Hispanophones) is the third and final studio album credited to Argentine rock band Pescado Rabioso, released in October 1973 on Talent-Microfón. It is essentially the second solo album by singer-songwriter Luis Alberto Spinetta, who used the group's name despite their disbandment earlier that year.

The album is named after and dedicated to French poet Antonin Artaud, and was conceived as a reaction to his writings. The album's original packaging is famous for its odd shape, which the record label initially resisted. Spinetta presented Artaud with two morning shows at the Teatro Astral on Avenida Corrientes, accompanied only by his acoustic guitar. Each audience member received a copy of Spinetta's manifesto Rock: Música dura, la suicidada por la sociedad, in which he presented his vision of the countercultural Argentine rock movement.

It is considered Spinetta's masterpiece and one of the most influential albums in Spanish-language rock music. It has been selected as the greatest album in the history of Argentine rock on several occasions, most notably Rolling Stone Argentina's The 100 Greatest Albums of National Rock in 2007.