Movida beef cheeks
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Madrid at night in 1980, photo by Paolo Monti. Madrid during the Spanish transition to democracy after the death of dictator Francisco Franco in 1975. La Movida Madrileña featured a rise in punk rock and synth-pop music, an openness regarding sexual expression and drug usage, and the emergence of new dialects such as cheli. In the years following the death of Francisco Franco, a growing underground punk rock music scene began to form in Madrid. La Movida Madrileña gained notoriety following a large punk concert at the Technical University of Madrid on February 9, 1980. La Movida Madrileña’s central component was an aesthetic influenced by punk rock and synth-pop music, as well as visual schools such as dada and futurism. Although some people involved with the movement testified to a lack of a unified political ideology, many elements of the movement were antifascist and had anarchist leanings.