saltalabancaBy José Gandue @Gandour

A significant part of contemporary Argentine rock music embraces a natural approach that allows it to sound appropriate for the occasion. It's rock that aims to engage with its audience by taking the world from corner to corner, collecting wine in cardboard boxes, and faithfully feeding on the word of the neighborhood. These are bands that live the daily life of their streets and take ownership of everything that happens around their homes. Some of these groups might cross borders and become popular throughout Latin America, but their primary goal is for their neighbors to catch their music, for the kids on the block to know them by name, and for their songs, one way or another, to become popular on the local courts. There's no pretense of glamour here; it's simply the good-natured fun of ordinary people. They are part of that phenomenon. Bankruptcy rules, a group that has earned its place making songs that the average person understands.

He's pulling off a major coup, in the middle of his new album tour!Eureka!, presents the first promotional video for this work, Baptism. The clip in question is one of the most bizarre audiovisual products of the year. Filmed in the greater Buenos Aires area, it presents a psychedelic story of love, infernal punishment, football and spiritual salvation, with extreme editing., with overflowing colors and lysergic movements that never stop surprising the viewer. Baptism It's a strange, confusing, eccentrically constructed video that manages to grab your attention from beginning to end. You might love it, you might hate it, but you'll hardly forget it. Salta la Banca takes a risk, breaks the mold, and invites its followers to appreciate the risk in its approach. I'm sure he'll do well in the attempt.

 

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