MTV_Unplugged_(Los_Tres_album)

<i>MTV Unplugged</i> (Los Tres album)

MTV Unplugged (Los Tres album)

1996 live album by Los Tres


Los Tres MTV Unplugged is an MTV Unplugged live acoustic album by Chilean rock band Los Tres, released on April 15, 1996, through Sony Music Chile.[1] The album was the band's first live album as well as the first MTV Unplugged album ever released by a Chilean band.[2] It was recorded on September 14, 1995, at Post Edge Studios, Miami, United States and features appearances from musicians Cuti Aste and Toño Restucci.[3] The album contains eleven songs from their previous studio albums alongside the original song "Traje Desastre" and three cover versions of songs by Chilean musician Roberto Parra. It is the band's most commercially successful album, going platinum and selling 150,000 copies within its first three months.[4][2]

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American magazine Al Borde placed the album at number 210 in their list of 250 Most Important Albums of Iberoamerican Rock, released on 2006, being one of the three albums by the band to appear on the list.[5]

Background

Following the international success of their third studio album La Espada & la Pared (1995), the band gave several performances in United States as a "showcase" to the executives of Sony Music in the country, this culminated in the recording of the live album on September 14, 1995, the project was managed by Alfredo Lewin and Alex Pels, both from MTV Latin America, about the process of including the band into the MTV Unplugged series Lewin said that "after La Espada & la Pared, Los Tres were a priority for Sony, they had reached the ceiling in the Chilean market and MTV had demonstrated that the thing as pan-regional by 1995", the album was produced by Joe Blaney, who had worked with artists such as The Clash and The Ramones as well as in Hello! MTV Unplugged, the live album from the series by Charly García.[6]

The album is composed by fifteen tracks, eleven of them are songs from their previous studio albums (five from Los Tres, one from Se Remata el Siglo and five from La Espada & la Pared), the unreleased song "Traje Desastre" and three cover versions of songs by Chilean musician Roberto Parra, the two cuecas "El Arrepentido" and "La Vida Que Yo He Pasado" and the foxtrot "Quién es la Que Viene Allí", these three covers are the three last songs in the album and were chosen as a hommage to Parra, a friend of Álvaro Henríquez, the leader of the band, and fellow musician who died months prior to the recording of the album, in April 1995.[7]

The song "Traje Desastre", the only single of the album, tells the story of a transexual woman who hides her identity, the music video of the song also reflects the themes of the song telling the story of a transexual woman who presents as a man during the day and works as a sex worker during the night, the name of the song is a word play, with "Traje Desaste" meaning "I brought disaster" and Traje de Sastre meaning "Tailor's Suit".[3][8]

Critical reception

The album was included in the list of 250 Most Important Albums of Iberoamerican Rock, released on 2006 by American magazine Al Borde, in the position 151, being one of the three albums by the band to appear in the list, alongside Los Tres (1991) and La Espada & la Pared (1995), that appear on the positions 151 and 61, respectively.

All-time lists

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Track listing

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Credits

Los Tres

  • Álvaro Henríquez – vocals, guitar, organ, mixing, mastering
  • Ángel Parra – guitar, backing vocals, mixing
  • Roberto Lindl – bass, double bass, backing vocals, mixing
  • Francisco Molina – drums, mixing

Guest artists

  • Cuti Aste – citar (tracks 5 and 10); accordion (tracks 2, 6, 12 and 14)[2]
  • Toño Restucci – mandolin (tracks 6, 7 and 12)

Personnel

  • Manolo Álvarez – photography
  • Lauren Radak – photography
  • Paula Golbin – MTV Unplugged producer
  • Alejandro Pels – MTV Unplugged executive producer
  • Joe Blaney – mixing
  • Antoinette Zel – MTV CEO
  • Adam Nathanson – coordination
  • Bruno del Granado – management

References

  1. "Los Tres - MTV Unplugged". Apple Music. Retrieved May 23, 2022.
  2. "Los Tres MTV Unplugged (1995)". Los3.cl. Archived from the original on September 12, 2011. Retrieved May 23, 2022.
  3. Schnell, Fernanda (January 28, 2021). "Los Tres MTV Unplugged". Rockaxis. Retrieved May 23, 2022.
  4. Balderston, Daniel; Gonzalez, Mike; Lopez, Ana M. (December 7, 2000). Encyclopedia of Contemporary Latin American and Caribbean Cultures. Routledge. ISBN 9781134788521 via Google Books.
  5. "250 albums del Rock Iberoamericano". Musiteka (in Spanish). Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved May 13, 2022.
  6. Veloso, Nuno (September 18, 2019). "Los Tres: de desenchufados a fomes". La Tercera. Retrieved May 23, 2022.
  7. Jofré, Alejandro (September 18, 2019). "¿Cuál es el mejor disco de Los Tres?". La Tercera (in Spanish). Retrieved May 24, 2022.

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