, released on November 21, 1985, is the second studio album by the iconic Argentine rock band Soda Stereo . This record is widely considered the "breakout" moment that propelled the trio—Gustavo Cerati, Zeta Bosio, and Charly Alberti—from local sensations to leaders of the pan-Latin American Rock en Español movement. Musical Evolution and Genre

Gustavo Cerati (Vocals/Guitar), Zeta Bosio (Bass), Charly Alberti (Drums) Estudios Moebio, Buenos Aires Length ~40 minutes (10 tracks) Legacy Certified double platinum in Argentina, Peru, and Chile Tracklist & Sonic Profile

When you listen to a low-quality YouTube rip of "Nada Personal," you are hearing a ghost. When you listen to the , you are hearing the ghost in the machine—the actual voltage that ran through Cerati’s guitar pedals, the actual air moved by Charly Alberti’s triggered drums, the actual hum of Buenos Aires’ power grid in 1985.

: A high-energy opening track with a "funky hook" and infectious rhythm.

Nada Personal was not an instant commercial smash like its successor Signos , but it was the crucial evolutionary step. It is the album where Soda Stereo stopped being a "Latin rock band" and became Soda Stereo —a global act unafraid of synthesizers, irony, and sonic experimentation.

You might ask: "It’s from 1985. Isn’t the master tape just 16-bit/44.1kHz?" Yes, originally. However, the 2019–2023 digital remasters of the Sony Music Latin catalog have been released in 24-bit/96kHz high-resolution audio. A file preserves this high-resolution data without compromise.

Formed by Gustavo Cerati (guitar, vocals), Zeta Bosio (bass), and Charly Alberti (drums), the band released their self-titled debut earlier in 1985. However, it was their second effort, Nada Personal , released in late 1985, that solidified their status as icons. The search term highlights a desire to return to that precise moment of ignition.