Pasto (album)

Pasto (Grass) is the debut album by Argentine rock group Babasónicos. It was recorded and released in 1992 and has guest appearances by Gustavo Cerati, Daniel Melero and members of other groups which, at the time, were also part of the New Argentinian Rock (or Sonic rock) movement, such as Martes Menta and Juana la Loca. The only single released from Pasto was "D-Generación", which was a minor radio hit at the time and made the upcoming band known to Argentinian listeners. The album has an eclectic style, with many of the tracks being short skits (such as "41" de Ocio", which consists of the band chatting between songs; or "Mutha Fucka", a track which seems to have been made by cutting and pasting together various audio samples taken from TV). It also has numerous references to cannabis culture, starting with the album name and various track names which refer to botany.

Pasto
Studio album by
Released1992
Recorded1992, Estudios Aguilar, Buenos Aires
GenreAlternative Rock
LabelSony Music
Babasónicos chronology
Pasto
(1992)
Trance Zomba
(1994)

Track listing

  1. "Intro"
  2. "D-Generación" (D-Generation)
  3. "Tripeando" (Tripping)
  4. "41" de Ocio" (41" of Leisure)
  5. "Sobre la Hierba" (On the Herb)
  6. "Chicos en el Pasto" (Kids on the Grass)
  7. "Canción de la Bandera" (Flag Song)
  8. "La Era del Amor" (The Love Age)
  9. "Natural"
  10. "Mutha Fucka"
  11. "Somos la Pelota" (We Are the Ball)
  12. "Guarda D.P.!" (Watch Out D.P.!)
  13. "Bien" (Fine)
  14. "Listo" (Ready)
  15. "Indios" (Indians)
  16. "Fiebre Roller" (Roller Fever)
  17. "Sol Naranja" (Orange Sun)
  18. "Umito"
  19. "Margaritas" (Daisies)
  20. "D-Generación (Trash Mix)"

Trivia

  • The man in the cover is a friend of the band's and their first manager, nicknamed Fácil-K (Easy-K), who also stars in one of the album's short skits, "Canción de la Bandera".
  • "D-Generación (Trash Mix)" starts with the riff from Metallica's Enter Sandman.
  • "Sobre la Hierba" has been apropiated by Babasónicos fans as an anthem, and is always sung at their gigs when the band is offstage.
  • The song that band members Diego and Gabo hum during the skit "Guarda D.P.!" is Japan's song "The Unconventional", from the 1978 album Adolescent Sex.
  • "Sobre la hierba" starts with a sample from Queen's "Mustapha"

The Song "La Era Del Amor" has a similar beat to Blur's song "She's So High". "Umito" samples "Tomorrow Never Knows" drum beat.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.