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Internationally, Argentina is known mostly for the tango, which developed in Buenos Aires and surrounding areas, as well as Montevideo, Uruguay. Folk, pop and classical music are also popular, and Argentinian artists like Mercedes Sosa and Atahualpa Yupanqui contributed greatly to the development of nueva canción. Andean music |- |Argentina |- |Bolivia |- |Chile |- |Ecuador |- |Peru |}
Main article: Cuarteto
Cuarteto, a form of dance music, became popular in Argentina during the 1940s, beginning with the genre's namesake and innovator, Cuarteto Leo, and was re-popularized in the 1980s.
Main article: Chamamé
Chamamé arose in the northeastern region Corrientes, an area with many settlers from Poland, Austria and Germany, many of them Jews. Polkas, mazurkas and waltzes came with these immigrants, and soon mixed with African and Amerindian musics. Chamamé emerged from this mix, becoming closely associated with the native Guaranís. The 20th century saw limited international popularity for Chamamé, though some artists, like Argentinian superstar Rock nacional
Rock nacional is a distinctive form of Argentinian rock and roll. It is said to have begun in about 1965, when a Beatlesque group called Los Shakers, from Uruguay, arrived in Argentina. At the time, popular music was a style called ritmo latino, a mainstream pop genre. Los Shakers brought a hard-edged form of rock to the country, and musicians like Litto Nebbia (of Los Gatos) began recording their own kind of rock. Los Gatos' "La Balsa", released early in their year, established the distinctive sound of rock nacional.
Main article: Tango music
Tango arose in the brothels, bars and port areas of Buenos Aires, where descendants of Europeans, Africans and Milonga - songs of the rural gauchos