Confesiones de Invierno

Confesiones de invierno
Studio album by Sui Generis
Released 1973 (Argentina)
Recorded 1973
Genre Folk rock
Length 36:20
Label Sony Music
Producer Charly García
Sui Generis chronology
Vida
(1972)
Confesiones de Invierno
(1973)
Pequeñas Anécdotas Sobre Las Instituciones
(1974)

Confesiones de Invierno (Winter Confessions) is the second album of Argentine folk rock group Sui Generis, released on 1973.

There are several versions of the origin of this "Rasguña Las Piedras"  : One version says that Charly had a girlfriend who was "dead" (catatonic) and buried. Some time later the body was exhumed and when they opened the coffin they found that its lid was scratched showing that she was buried alive. This version was believed by Charly Garcia. Another version says that this is a hymn to the military coup of 76 in Argentina. The story of dead, missing and detained in secret, where they were locked up in solitary confinement, with his hands tied and blindfolded, listening hour after hour as others were tortured. However, this song was written a few years before the coup. Another is the love story between a boy and a girl, in which the girl was crushed by a wall, and the protagonist narrates what is happening and its impotence to save her. She scratched the stones to leave, he listens and tries to do something, but can not. The truth is that everything is clarified in an interview with Charly Garcia by Felipe Bianchi in 2011: "For the last time. Is it true you wrote "Rasguña las Piedras" in honor of a girlfriend who had catalepsy?" "I have no idea who came up with that. Really. There are even more versions. They also say that my sister was dead. Nonsense! It's a myth. Neither catalepsy or anything. The song is pure poetic fantasy and it was done on a regular day. I was living with Maria Rosa Yorio in a pension and she went to buy potatoes or something. When she returned, the song was ready" [1]

Track listing

  1. "Cuando Ya Me Empiece a Quedar Solo" (When I Begin to Stay Alone) (García) – 3:37
  2. "Bienvenidos al Tren" (Welcome to the Train) (García) – 3:14
  3. "Un Hada, Un Cisne" (A Fairy, A Swan) (García) – 6:25
  4. "Confesiones de Invierno" (Winter Confessions) (García) – 4:05
  5. "Rasguña Las Piedras" (Scratch the Stones) (García) – 3:11
  6. "Lunes Otra Vez" (Monday Once Again) (García) – 3:10
  7. "Aprendizaje" (Learning) (García) – 3:45
  8. "Mr. Jones, o Pequeña Semblanza de Una Familia Tipo Americana" (Mr. Jones, or Small Portrait of a Typical American Family) (García) – 1:44
  9. "Tribulaciones, Lamento y Ocaso de Un Tonto Rey Imaginario, o No" (Tribulations, Moaning and Decline of an Imaginary Foolish King, or Not) (García) – 5:56

References

  1. "¿Is real the "Rasguña las piedras" story?".
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