The theme of the first of two musical collaborations between Danna and Santa Fe Klan was the story of a toxic relationship, recorded last Friday and set to be released at the end of the year.
The title of the song, the rapper reveals, is “Nothing is Forever” and will be released by the singer when she feels it is appropriate.
“The song was cool. She had some ideas like a chorus, but I still wrote with just the track, that is, I didn’t follow her lead, I started to get audios, I started to write and then I adapted what she brought,” says Santa Fe.
“Then we are going to do another one (song) but about when you can’t see your son, what the mother has to say to the man and what the man has to say to the mother, I would upload that one but I think not until 2025,” he details.
There were hints of a collaboration between the two last year, when Ángel Jair Quezada Jasso, the musician’s real name, revealed that he had sent a track to the actress.
On Friday, social media was abuzz when the artists posted photos of the two of them in a recording studio with beer in hand, which within hours received more than half a million positive reactions.
“We made her drink cagua,” exclaims the 24-year-old from Guanajuato, amused.
Danna, 29, has released six pop albums in her career, with Mi globo azul (2001) being the first of them; KO, her most recent production, was nominated for a Latin Grammy in 2021.
Santa Fe Klan, meanwhile, began recording his own songs when he was a teenager; three years ago he released the song “Grandes ligas” alongside Snoop Dogg and Lupillo Rivera, and then did the same with “Cuidando el territorio” alongside Calibre 50 and Beto Sierra. Rap is his main genre, but he has included cumbia and regional Mexican music in his creations.
For their new production, Blanco y negro, Santa Fe Klan will seek to partner with an electronics company to release a limited edition of a vinyl and cassette player, formats that dominated the home music scene in the 70s and 80s.
The reason for this is that, in addition to the digital version to be released on October 17, the singer wants to release it in said retro formats.
“My idea is to release a tape recorder. I’m looking for a brand that wants to collaborate so that I can get the cassette player and the record,” he says.
On Saturday, Santa Fe Klan visited the home of La Academia, a musical reality show on TV Azteca, where they spent more than an hour interacting with the student generation.
“They do know (about music, he laughs), I was asking them things and it seems that they are learning it and they already have it. If they continue like this, they will really go far,” he says.
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