Soda Stereo

Soda Stereo
Soda Stereo in Lima in 2007
Soda Stereo in Lima in 2007
Background information
Also known asSoda
OriginBuenos Aires, Argentina
Genres
Years active1982–1997, 2007, 2020–2022
LabelsSony Music, Sony BMG, Columbia
Past members
Websitesodastereo.com

Soda Stereo was an Argentine rock band formed in Buenos Aires in 1982. The band's membership consisted of singer-guitarist Gustavo Cerati, bassist Zeta Bosio and drummer Charly Alberti. During their career, the band released seven studio albums before disbanding in 1997. Soda Stereo is the best-selling Argentine band of all time,[1] having sold seven million records by 2007.[2]

The band's 1984 self-titled debut album featured a new wave and ska influenced sound, which evolved into a post-punk style found on their subsequent albums Nada personal (1985), Signos (1986), and Doble Vida (1988). The band's 1990 album Canción Animal featured the alternative rock anthem "De Música Ligera", their best-known song in Latin America. On their last two albums, Dynamo (1992) and Sueño Stereo (1995), their sound evolved to incorporate genres such as shoegaze and art rock. Their farewell concert on 20 September 1997 at the Estadio Monumental in Buenos Aires was released later that year on the live albums El Último Concierto A and B.

All three members remained musically active following the band's split, with Cerati embarking a solo career. Soda Stereo reunited for the Me Verás Volver concert tour in 2007 and played their final concert on 21 December 2007. Cerati suffered a stroke after performing a solo show in Caracas, Venezuela, on 15 May 2010. He was hospitalized in Buenos Aires, Argentina, and fell into a coma for 4 years. He died on 4 September 2014 from respiratory arrest. Bosio and Alberti reunited Soda Stereo in 2020 for the Gracias Totales tour, which featured several guest singers including Cerati's son Benito and Coldplay frontman Chris Martin, before disbanding again in 2022.

  1. ^ de 2007, 10 de Junio (24 October 2017). "La vuelta de la mítica banda Soda Stereo, con día y hora". infobae (in European Spanish). Retrieved 5 September 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ Clarín.com (19 October 2007). "Soda Stereo: los verás volver". www.clarin.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 5 September 2021.