(2000): Su debut oficial que introdujo su estilo optimista y retro. Tan Simple Como El Amor

Below is the complete discography of La Casa Azul, including studio albums, EPs, compilations, and essential singles.

| Year | Album Title | Format | Notes | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 2004 | Tan Simple Como el Amor | CD/LP | Reissued in 2014 on blue vinyl. | | 2009 | La Nueva Yma Sumac | CD/LP | Out of print; very expensive on resale. | | 2011 | La Polinesia Meridional | 2xCD/2xLP | Includes instrumental disc on CD version. | | 2019 | La Gran Esfera | CD/LP/Cassette | Latin Grammy winner. |

Posiblemente el disco más importante de su carrera. La canción homónima se convirtió en un himno generacional y estuvo cerca de representar a España en Eurovisión. El álbum es una explosión de sintetizadores y arreglos orquestales, elevando el "shibuya-kei" a su máxima expresión en castellano.

The earliest material—collected from demos and their debut EP Cerca de Shibuya (2000)—is rough around the edges, but that’s its charm. You can hear Guille figuring it out. Tracks like “La fiesta universal” (pre-fame version) buzz with a homemade energy: Casio keyboards, four-track tape hiss, and harmonies that are intentionally wobbly but breathtakingly earnest. The influence of The Beach Boys’ Pet Sounds is not subtle; it’s a blueprint. But instead of California surf, you get a nostalgic, rain-swept vision of a Japanese city at dusk. “Shibuya” becomes a recurring motif—a symbol for futuristic longing. This era is for completists and anyone who loves lo-fi indie pop (think early Magnetic Fields or The Softies, but warmer).