León Gieco

Leon Gieco is a singer of Argentinian rock'n'roll, born the November 20th 1951 close to the town of Cañada Rosquí N (in the north of the province of Santa Fe in Argentine). It is a popular song writer and performer in Argentina, which mixes sometimes the Folk music of its country with its compositions Rock, and whose texts of the Chanson S are often engaged, speaking about the Human rights and solidarity with disinherited. Its musical style and its implication in the social causes made it call the " Bob Dylan argentin".

Although its discographic production is important, it is especially known out of its country for the song " Solo the pido has Dios" , which was interpreted in its original version by Mercedes Sosa, but also included in various languages by other artists (in France, one can announce Florent Pagny which sang it in Spanish and Pierre Bachelet which adapted it in French under the title " For a world bleu").

One of its songs (" Ojo idiot los Orozco") this of notable has that for a rather long text, it comprises only one vowel, the letter " O".

Discography

  • León Gieco (1973)
  • Bandaged It los Caballos Cansados (1974)
  • El fantasma of Canterville (1976)
  • IV LP (1978)
  • Siete años (1980)
  • Pensar in nada (1981)
  • Corazón americano/El gran concierto (1985)
  • Of Ushuaia to Quiaca 1 (1985)
  • Of Ushuaia to Quiaca 2 (1985)
  • Of Ushuaia to Quiaca 3 (1985)
  • Semillas LED corazón (1989)
  • Ayer hoy (1989)
  • Concierto in vivo idiot Pete Seeger (1990)
  • Mensajes LED alma (1992)
  • Desenchufado (1994)
  • Orozco (1997)
  • In el país of the libertad (1999)
  • Of Ushuaia to Quiaca 4 (1999)
  • 40 will obras fundamentales (2000) there
  • Bandidos rural (2001)
  • Por partida doble (2001)
  • El vivo of León (2003) (exists in DVD)
  • Of Ushuaia to Quiaca (new edition) (2005)
  • Por favor, perdón there gracias (2005)

External bonds

  • Official site

Random links:Nuuk Idraetslag | Silvia Farina Elia | Championship of Algeria of football 1986-1987 | Walks in Rome | American Association (XIXe century) | São_Caetano_(Madalena)