La Esquina del Infinito
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La Esquina del Infinito | ||
Studio album by La Renga | ||
Released | August 11, 2000 | |
Recorded | 2000 | |
Genre | Rock Hard Rock |
|
Label | PolyGram | |
Producer(s) | Ricardo Mollo La Renga |
|
La Renga chronology | ||
---|---|---|
La Renga (1998) |
La Esquina del Infinito (2000) |
Image:Insoportablemente vivo.jpg Insoportablemente Vivo (2001) |
One excavated informal one of "jazz" (the same one that opens the album) closes track list, catches the commentaries of Chizzo and Teté moving away of the study and, soon, a hard door-closing that extends indefinitely. Then, La Renga yes appears transported towards the infinite... The song "En El Baldío", connects with the classic "La Balada del Diablo y La Muerte" (1996): the guardians angels exist, yes, but they die around your house. The change happens then through the concept. They continue riding in rock like the thrashero "La Vida, Las Mismas Calles" and "Motoralmaisangre", "El Rey de La Triste Felicidad" and "Al Que He Sangrado". Of which there was to which there is, there is a substantial improvement in the audio one, Chizzo is looser at the time of puntear and certain eclecticism. They are not deprived of cords and tapes the other way around in the épica ballad "El Cielo del Desengaño", are shown to funk with "En Pie" and they are used cameras for the recited one that introduces to "Estalla". They do not forget the police repression ("Panic Show") and contribute "sentimental" advice fans in "Arte Infernal". They close with the version of "My, My, Hey Hey", where they use that of which "the rock and roll will never die" as the instinctive shout of survival of a species that it does not want to be extinguished.
[edit] Track listing
All songs by Gustavo Nápoli except Hey, Hey, My, My
- La Vida, Las Mismas Calles
- Motoralmaisangre
- Al Que He Sangrado
- Panic Show
- El Cielo del Desengaño
- Arte Infernal
- En El Baldío
- En Pie
- El Rey de La Triste Felicidad
- Estalla
- Hey, Hey, My, My (Neil Young)