Indio Solari 1949-2026

TWB103

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Is it that strange? Indio's last album was released in 2018. I never particularly cared for rock nacional, but I was thoroughly fascinated to hear how an italian heroin addict who knew nothing about Argentina came down here, formed the band SUMO, and with songs written in English became one of the pillars of rock nacional.

I suppose we should be more educated on Indio, but then again I didn't hear a single Argentinian note the passing of Jimmy Buffett. I mean the man had 30 albums, 27 restaurants, 40 resorts & hotels...but why would an Argentinian care about any of that?
 
Has this been getting wall-to-wall coverage on the 24-hour news channels? I wouldn't know: we gave up on the endless cycle of traffic cameras, local protests and looped videos of hoodlums being shot dead in the street long ago. It's not been talked about amongst any of my friends or family and not only are they old enough to know who he was, they would likely have been his audience.

I put it down to the lack of political nous in the present government - yes really!

Back in the good old days of the Peronistas when police would be fighting off protesters at the barricades (again), the economy would be tanking (again), a government minister would be caught up in a horrendous political/sexual/financial scandal (again), an old vedette or tango singer or a slightly younger, drug-riddled rock star would drop dead and then somebody from party HQ would be making sure all the attention was diverted away from the current debacle and channelled into deep reverence for the dear, dear departed until the political crisis had passed.

In fact I used to imagine a secret Government Department for the Timely Departure of National Treasures. At times of national emergency, two black-suited operatives would be dispatched to the home of an elderly, ailing star of yesteryear and upon entering their home, explain that it was their turn to make the ultimate sacrifice to divert attention from the current mess. "Why me? Why now? Why can't it be Moria Casan or Mirtha Legrande or AAAaaaaagggghhhh........."
 
Reading The Herald article about the culture surrounding Los Redondos reminds me of the Grateful Dead phenomena in The US.

RIP, Indio.
 
It's been on the news. There was an enormous farewell. His fans are complete fanatics. I have heard of his bands many times from friends in the music scene here. I suppose it's something that you might not ever stumble upon, but I liked the songs, the lyrics. I think he's less akin to Jimmy Buffet, more akin to a more covert Bruce Springsteen, he touched on themes very close to those suffering duress under government regimes, life...but not in such overt ways. He's absolutely one of the legends of Rock Nacional.
 
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Is it that strange? Indio's last album was released in 2018. I never particularly cared for rock nacional, but I was thoroughly fascinated to hear how an italian heroin addict who knew nothing about Argentina came down here, formed the band SUMO, and with songs written in English became one of the pillars of rock nacional.
Luca Proda was the Italian, not this Indio who just died. Though they were both more of the underground counter-culture rock. Both bald. Compared to some more the more pop rock that expats might hear of more often. I do not know much, but Indio's band Los Redondos is heard often. Seems more natural to have locally grown culture. It more is baffling to me why they overpay money attend concerts of old English bands like Rolling Stones and Coldplay.
 
Was first in Argentina in 2012 and honestly never heard of this guy. Seriously.
Since 2004 here...and same. And I listen to Attaque 77, Cadillacs, and a couple of other ARG rock bands.

But I have to admit, now that I've heard a few of his songs, I don't feel like I missed anything.
 
while I have been studying Argentine music for about 20 years now, and own something like 500 albums of it, I never really clicked with Solari.
I will have to go back and listen again.
Rock Nacional is a pretty porous description.
The early stuff was heavily influenced by the Beatles, Creedence Clearwater (everybody over a certain age LOVES Creedence) and british prog rock like Genesis, Yes, and Emerson Lake and Palmer.
Lots of 70s Rock Nacional is very classical/rock like, because almost all Argentine musicians, even the punks, have some classical music background.
I have all three of the original Sumo albums, and I like them a lot.
The best songs are all in Spanish- especially No Hablar and Rubio Tirada.
And while Luca was Italian, he was also Scottish, and he came to Argentina from the London punk rock scene, where he played in the same venues as bands like Joy Division, XTC, and Wire.
I think the really significant thing he brought to Argentine music was the ska/dub influence, as nobody here had really heard the 2 tone bands, like the Specials, Selector, and The Beat, who combined horns, afro-caribean music, and punk.
That was what made Sumo really different, and some of that influence still shows up in many bands today.
To call Luca a "heroin addict", while accurate, is somewhat misleading.
I mean, there are heroin addicts, and then there are heroin addicts.
Janis Joplin died of a heroin overdose.
John Lennon and Keith Richards were both heroin addicts.
Jerry Lewis and Dean Martin were both addicted to opiate pills for well over a decade- Lewis used to take 15 percodin pills a day, enough to literally kill a horse.
and yet, none of them is primarily described as an addict- we tend to gloss over that in favor of the music.

I feel the same way about Luca- the music is unique, and, by the time he died, he was 100% Argentine, regardless of the fact that he attended the same school (GordonStoun) as King Charles.
 
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