Iconic Argentinian Songs:La balsa
A possible reading of La balsa, one of the most influential songs in Argentine rock.
More than fifty years after its release, La balsa remains one of the most listened-to and analyzed songs in Argentine rock. What explains the fact that a song written in 1967 continues to raise so much interest?
Perhaps one answer is that the song never fully explains itself. Its images are open, its metaphors allow different readings, and many of its questions remain unanswered. Each generation seems to find something different in it.
In this article, we will not try to discover the definitive meaning of the lyrics. As with many works of art, La balsa can be understood in different ways. Our goal is to explore some of the song’s most suggestive metaphors and reflect on how language creates meaning.
Over time, some listeners have interpreted the song as a metaphor for the desire to escape an oppressive reality, a reading influenced by the political and social context of Argentina at the time. However, the lyrics never explicitly mention those events. For that reason, rather than offering a definitive explanation, we will treat that interpretation as one of the many possibilities the song leaves open.
🌍 An Abandoned World
Is the world abandoned… or does the narrator feel abandoned?
The song begins by describing a feeling, not necessarily a fact. The “abandoned world” may be a real place, but it may also be a way of perceiving reality when someone feels lonely, disconnected, or unable to belong.
🧭 The Desire to Escape
Interestingly, we never find out where that place is. The song is not really focused on the destination, but on the desire to leave.
Perhaps what matters is not where the narrator wants to go, but what he wants to get away from.
🪵 Gathering the Wood
The narrator realizes that wanting to leave is not enough. Before he can escape, he has to build the means to do so.
The wood can be understood literally, as the material needed to build the raft. But it can also work as a metaphor for the resources, effort, courage, or preparation required to change one’s life.
🛶 A Raft Built to Sink
Here we find the great paradox of the song. Usually, a raft is built to survive, not to sink.
Does this mean the narrator is looking for failure? Or is he willing to leave everything behind, even without any guarantee of reaching a safe destination? The song never answers that question.
🤔 So… What Does It Mean?
Perhaps that is not the best question. It may be more interesting to ask why the song leaves so many spaces open.
We never know exactly where the narrator wants to go. We do not know what he is missing. We do not know what “madness” means. And we do not fully know what the shipwreck represents.
That ambiguity is probably one of the reasons why La balsa continues to generate new interpretations more than fifty years later.
Maybe the greatest lesson of the song is that wanting to escape is not enough. First, you have to gather the wood.