We Speak Music
“Trigger My Aria” Is Maria Rosa La Kakiee’s No-Apologies Power Anthem
Maria Rosa La Kakiee doesn’t ask for space—she claims it. On “Trigger My Aria,” the independent singer-songwriter unleashes a fierce hip-hop/pop anthem rooted in confidence, clarity, and emotional survival. It’s bold, brash, and deeply personal, capturing the sound of an artist who knows her worth and isn’t interested in compromising it.
The track’s production, handled by Mike Midura, delivers a punchy yet flexible foundation that lets Maria Rosa’s voice take center stage. Her delivery is sharp and commanding, weaving attitude with intention. There’s a sense of urgency here, amplified by the song’s freestyle energy, as if the studio moment itself demanded to be immortalized.
What makes “Trigger My Aria” hit hardest is its message. Maria Rosa flips the idea of being triggered into a symbol of strength, transforming negativity into motivation. Her lyrics feel like a manifesto—cutting off those who drain her energy and standing firm in self-respect. It’s empowering without being preachy, fierce without losing its heart.
With a career shaped by resilience, performance, and persistence, Maria Rosa brings undeniable credibility to this release. “Trigger My Aria” feels like a turning point, signaling the start of a fearless new chapter. If this single is any indication, she’s not just stepping into her power—she’s daring the world to keep up.
We Speak Music
Francisco turns heartbreak chaos into catharsis on “Passing Fix”
Spanish singer-songwriter Francisco, now based in the UK, returns with his latest release “Passing Fix”, a raw, fast-moving standout from his new album Open Letters.
If heartbreak had a soundtrack while it’s still actively happening (and not yet processed), this would be it.
Blending alternative rock, folk, and indie-experimental production, Open Letters explores emotional dependency, longing, and the messy space between connection and collapse. But “Passing Fix” is where things get especially unfiltered; a spiralling mix of humour, bitterness, vulnerability, and brutal self-awareness.
It’s the sound of overthinking in real time.
The song started with a single, very honest chorus line:
“If I’m still single by 28 I’ll drown myself in liquor, be a spinster…”
From there, Francisco built a track that feels like emotional overload in motion: part diary entry, part breakdown, part ironic commentary on his own thoughts.
Wanting it to feel like the emotional aftermath of his earlier track “21/7”, Francisco leans fully into obsession, self-sabotage, and the way we sometimes blame ourselves just to make sense of hurt.
“Passing Fix” doesn’t just describe heartbreak; it lives inside it, spirals through it, and somehow turns it into something strangely cathartic.
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