Los Fabulosos Cadillacs

(Redirected from Sopa de Caracol (EP))

Los Fabulosos Cadillacs is an Argentine musical group from Buenos Aires. Their music fuses ska with Latin rock and various other styles.

Los Fabulosos Cadillacs
Background information
OriginBuenos Aires, Argentina
GenresSka, salsa, samba, reggae, mambo
Years active1985-2002
2006
2008-2018
LabelsSony Music; Columbia Records
MembersVicentico
Sr. Flavio
Sergio Rotman
Mario Siperman
Fernando Ricciardi
Daniel Lozano
Astor Cianciarulo
Florián Fernandez Capello
Websitewww.fabulosos-cadillacs.com
Official Los Fabulosos Cadillacs logo

Background and style

edit

Formed in 1985, they released their first album, Bares y Fondas (Bars and Boardinghouses), in 1986 and have since released fourteen more albums. They are one of the most influential and most-referenced ska bands of the Latin ska world.[1]

The band's sound is a mix of ska, salsa, mambo, reggae, funk and samba. It is also noted for its irreverent and humorous lyrics which often contain political undertones.[2] The line-up has changed throughout the years, but the core members have always been the co-founders: lead singer Gabriel Fernandez Capello (known as Vicentico) and bass player and backing vocalist Flavio Cianciarulo (known as Sr. Flavio). Vicentico and Sr. Flavio have done the majority of the songwriting and lyrics as well. Saxophonist Sergio Rotman, drummer Fernando Ricciardi and keyboardi player Mario Siperman have also been in all line-ups of the band. Trumpeter Daniel Lozano joined in 1986, replacing Serguei Itzcowick. Another saxophonist, Naco Goldfinger was in the band from 1985 to 1991. Guitarist Aníbal Rigozzi was a founding member and left the group in 1996 to be replaced by Ariel Minimal, who left the group in 2008. Trombonist Fernando Albareda was in the band from 1991 to 2008. Percussionist Luciano Giugno was also a founding member, leaving in 1989. His replacement, Gerardo Rotblat joined in 1991; he died in 2008.

Collaborations and recognition

edit

The band, which collaborated with some music stars such as Mick Jones, Debbie Harry, Celia Cruz, Rubén Blades and Fishbone, received the MTV Video Music Award for International Viewer's Choice (Latin America) in 1994 for the single "El Matador", in what probably was the peak of popularity of the band. On September 29 of that year, they produced an MTV Unplugged concert. The Cadillacs also won the inaugural Grammy Award for Best Latin Rock/Alternative Performance for Fabulosos Calavera in 1998, and were nominated in the 1st Annual Latin Grammy Awards for Best Rock Performance by a Duo/Group with Vocals and Best Music Video for "La Vida", which received the MTV Video Music Award for International Viewer's Choice (Southern Latin America) in 2000.

Return

edit

On April 7, 2008, the band's front man, Vicentico, announced the band's return from a six-year break. According to Vicentico's mySpace, this represented a new phase for the band. On March 10, 2009, they released a new album, La Luz del Ritmo, distributed by Nacional Records in the US. Along with the release, the band toured throughout spring 2009 in the Americas.

Along with the news of their return, Vicentico's mySpace announced that due to Gerardo "Toto" Rotblat's recent death, the band had been forced to make changes. The new line-up was as follows: Vicentico (lead vocals), Flavio Cianciarulo (bass[ambiguous] and backing vocals), Sergio Rotman (saxophone), Daniel Lozano (trumpet), Fernando Ricciardi (drums and percussion) and Mario Siperman (keyboards), all of whom are LFC veterans. In 2016, Vicentico and Flavio Cianciarulo's sons joined: Florián Fernández Capello (guitars) and Astor Cianciarulo (drums and bass[ambiguous]).

Discography

edit

Studio albums

edit

Compilation albums

edit

Live albums

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Los Fabulosos Cadillacs reviews, music, news". sputnikmusic. Retrieved 2013-12-09.
  2. ^ Aeberhard, 2010. p. 610

Bibliography

edit
  • Aeberhard, Danny; Benson, Andrew; O'Brien, Rosalba; Phillips, Lucy; Manzo, Clemmy, eds. (November 15, 2010). The Rough Guide to Argentina. Rough Guides. ISBN 978-1848365216.
edit