While the coronavirus and Filomena frozen the country, Vetusta Morla created her new album. “Suddenly, in a year we have had a pandemic, an invisible virus that has changed everything, natural phenomena derived from climate change …”, says Guille Galván, composer and guitarist for Vetusta Morla.
It has been a year of constant uncertainty and, from there, the group has built ‘Cable a Tierra’. “We did it at a time where we didn’t really know what was going to happen the following week and where the fragility of life itself was latent from minute one, “says Galván.
That fragility, like the rest of society, has led them to return to tradition. In this sense, Pucho, singer of Vetusta Morla, affirms that “it is an album that speaks, investigates or delves into the roots, in popular folk music, back to the folklore “.
“The old world dances, says goodbye and goes barefoot,” they say in the lyrics of one of his songs. And so, barefoot and accompanied by our history, Vetusta Morla proposes us to put down roots again.

Ricardo is a renowned author and journalist, known for his exceptional writing on top-news stories. He currently works as a writer at the 247 News Agency, where he is known for his ability to deliver breaking news and insightful analysis on the most pressing issues of the day.