As daughter of a director and an actress, singer Nuria Saba grew up watching theater and cinema, but saw music as a shelter. These days, he releases ‘If you decide to leave’, one of the themes of the album produced by the winner of Grammy, Nicolás Ramírez. ‘Cariñito’, is a different song than you have done, but you also talk about the links.
How do you describe it? Producing is a beautiful moment where finally, the song leaves the four walls that it has been bouncing, and falls into the hands of another person and is another point of view. I had never made a pambiche who is a merengue derivative because I am Peruvian, my mother (Els Vandell) is Dutch, my dad (Edgar Saba) is Arabic, the truth that I don’t even know how to dance (laughs). But I loved this experience of being able to open myself to places that I would never have arrived alone.
Of course, without losing the essence. https://www.youtube.
com/watch?v=J6B5ezv1VWC Tony Succar talked about defending his own sound and not falling into the pressure of the industry. Do you agree with that? Yes, above all, because the problem for me is that if there are people who applaud you and automatically, a connection is created in your head how good it is to please the other, right? And it is something that goes directly to the ego. The outside’s reward is not as important as you are proud to wear the flag of your song.
For example, ‘If you decide to leave’, which I know is going to be less commercial, it is my.
