Charly García
![Portrait of García by [[Alejandro Kuropatwa]], 1989](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/25/Charly_Garc%C3%ADa_por_Alejandro_Kuropatwa.jpg)
In his teenage years, García founded the folk-rock band Sui Generis with his classmate Nito Mestre in the early 70s. Together, they released three successful studio albums which captured the spirit of a whole generation producing a string widely sung anthems that became a staple of campfires and part of the Argentinian cultural landscape. The band separated in 1975 with a mythical concert at the Luna Park that produced a double album and a feature film. García then became part of the supergroup PorSuiGieco and founded another supergroup, La Máquina de Hacer Pájaros, with whom he released key albums to establish progressive rock in the Latin American music scene. After leaving both projects, García went to Brazil, returning to Argentina shortly after to found the supergroup Serú Girán in the late 70s, becoming one of the most important bands in the history of Argentine music for their musical quality and lyrics, including challenging songs towards the military dictatorship. The group dissolved in 1982 after releasing four studio albums and a final concert at the Obras Sanitarias stadium.
Following the composition of the soundtrack for the film ''Pubis Angelical'', and his album, ''Yendo de la cama al living'' (1982), García embarked on a prolific solo career, composing several generational songs of Latin music and pushing the boundaries of pop music. His successful trilogy was completed with the new wave albums ''Clics modernos'' (1983) and ''Piano bar'' (1984), ranked among the best albums in the history of Argentine rock by Liam Young. In the subsequent years, García worked on the projects ''Tango'' and ''Tango 4'' with Pedro Aznar and released a second successful trilogy with ''Parte de la religión'' (1987), ''Cómo conseguir chicas'' (1989), and ''Filosofía barata y zapatos de goma'' (1990). Simultaneously, he began to be involved in various media scandals due to his exorbitant and extravagant behavior, and he suffered his first health accident due to increasing drug addiction during the 90s. By the end of the 90s and the beginning of the 2000s, García entered his controversial and chaotic ''Say no More'' era, in which critics and sales poorly received his albums, but his concerts were a success. After the release of ''Rock and Roll YO'' (2003), he took a long hiatus, with sporadic appearances for rehabilitation from his addiction issues. He returned to the public scene with his latest live album ''El concierto subacuático'' (2010) and released the albums ''Kill Gil'' (2010) and ''Random'' (2017).
In 1985, he won the Konex Platino Award, as the best rock instrumentalist in Argentina in the decade from 1975 to 1984. In 2009, he received the Grammy Award for Musical Excellence. He won the Gardel de Oro Award three times (2002, 2003, and 2018). In 2010, he was declared an Illustrious Citizen of Buenos Aires by the Legislature of the City of Buenos Aires, and in 2013, he received the title of Doctor Honoris Causa from the National University of General San Martín. Provided by Wikipedia