The acclaimed Puerto Rican band CIRCO joined the Argentine rock band CONOCIENDO RUSIA, to create their new single “Se abre el cielo”. This special collaboration was accompanied by a music video, and is now available on all digital music platforms. The song, released under the La Buena FortunaMusic record label, was produced by all CIRCO members: José L. Abreu, José David Pérez, Edgardo Santiago and Orlando Méndez.
Uniting the sounds of Puerto Rico and Argentina, “Se abre el cielo” is a piece full of pleasant melodies, representing the contrast of emotions that collide with each other when people let go of a dying love and celebrate freedom.
“Mateo Sujatovich (member leader of Conociendo Rusia) comes to us out of curiosity. We discovered his artistic proposal by browsing the musical networks of cyberspace and we were immediately attracted by his musicality and history. He is a young artist, but with an ancestral baggage of timeless classics. We sent him the song and he immediately caught on to infuse his vocal performance and guitar complement. It has been a beautiful experience to share our music with Mateo and the beginning of a beautiful friendship”, expressed Fofé, vocalist of CIRCO.
Musically, CIRCO presents a representative song of ArtRock that defines the style of the band. “Se abre el cielo” is a song by José L. Abreu aka Fofé, which rests on the rhythmic fusion of the Yubá (one of the different rhythms of the Puerto Rican Bomba), an emotional melody full of feeling and intentionally dramatic lyrics.
Connect with CIRCO:
SPOTIFY: https://open.spotify.com/album/4OxIo8TcZV940owzBuhw7Q?si=ebkRAsPxQbat54ei9h_0xQ
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/circoband/
INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/circo_oficial/
TWITTER: https://twitter.com/circo_oficial

More Stories
Just Minnie Confronts the Wreckage of the Heart and Emerges Triumphant on “At The Edges Of Time”
TINKICKER fuse Progressive Metal, Hard Rock and dark tales of toxic relationships, family trauma and emotional poison on “The Forbidden Fruit”
DARIA Unveils “Unholy”: A Cinematic Manifesto on Escaping the Toxic Game