Pedro Aznar

Pedro Aznar, born on July 23, 1959, in Liniers, Buenos Aires, is an Argentine singer, songwriter, producer, guitarist, keyboardist and bassist. His early fascination with vinyl led him to begin classical guitar at nine and soon join the underground trio Madre Atómica as bassist at fifteen. In 1978 he joined the influential rock group Serú Girán, contributing original compositions and expanding his instrumental palette; the group achieved critical acclaim with albums such as Serú Girán (1978) and Serú Girán 92 (1992). After leaving the band in 1982, Pedro Aznar released his self‑titled debut Pedro Aznar (1982) and followed with Contemplación (1984), Tango (1986), and Radio Pinti (1991), the latter a collaboration with Charly García and Enrique Pinti that earned a platinum certification. His solo career continued with David y Goliath (1995), Cuerpo y Alma (1998), and Quebrado (2008), the latter featuring covers of Luis Alberto Spinetta, Charly García, and The Beatles. The following decade saw live and studio milestones including A solas con el mundo (2010), Ahora (2012), the Spinetta tribute Puentes Amarillos: Aznar celebra la música de Spinetta (2012), Mil noches y un instante (2013) and Contraluz (2016). In the late 2010s and 2020s, Pedro Aznar focused on collaborative and conceptual projects: Abrazo de Hermanos with Chilean songwriter Manuel García (2019), the tango-leaning Utopía with violinist Ramiro Gallo (2019), the soundtrack EP Música incidental (2020), the folk-rooted Flor y Raíz (2021) and the expansive studio album El mundo no se hizo en dos días (2022), followed by the politically charged EP La hora de la infamia in October 2025.

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