Above the Noise: Why I Chose to Create Music
- Jan 19
- 2 min read
I am not changing who I am.I am expanding how I express it.
For a long time, music has lived quietly alongside my life, not as a distraction, not as a hobby, but as a place where thoughts settle, emotions organize themselves, and meaning takes shape. Somewhere between silence and sound, I realized that music had become one of the most honest ways I understand myself.
Creating music didn’t arrive as a decision.It arrived as a realization.
I am not stepping away from anything I’ve built. I am not abandoning one path for another. Music is not a replacement, it is a continuation. A deeper layer of the same discipline, intention, and reflection that guides everything I do.
What excites me most is not “being a DJ” in the traditional sense, and it’s important for me to say this clearly. I am not an alien disco DJ, chasing trends or hiding behind machines. Every song I release is written by me. Every composition begins with words, emotion, and structure. The sounds, the arrangements, the symbolism - they are all deliberate. Music, for me, is not about pressing play. It is about building meaning through sound.
I write my music the way I write my stories, with memory, with tension, with restraint. I create symbols inside the music because that is how I process life. Certain sounds represent altitude, distance, clarity, solitude, movement. Others represent love, doubt, perseverance, and quiet victories. Nothing is accidental. Everything has a reason to exist.
On March 1, I will release three albums, each representing a different internal space I’ve lived in:
Above the Noise: An electronic and trance journey focused on clarity, altitude, and consciousness. Music written to exist where distraction fades and intention becomes sharper.
Wide Awake: A more dynamic and energetic exploration, blending movement, rhythm, and awareness, rooted in being present while everything around you is in motion.
A 45 Mil Pies del Alma: An intimate and emotional project, born at altitude, where regional sounds, vallenato influences, and rap coexist with personal reflection and vulnerability.
These albums are not characters I’m playing. They are states of mind I’ve lived.
Music has given me a place to slow down without stopping, to reflect without retreating, to express without explaining. It has taught me that discipline and sensitivity are not opposites, they can coexist beautifully when given the right medium.
I’m sharing this not as an announcement of change, but as an invitation into a part of my creative world that has been quietly forming for a long time. Music didn’t pull me away from who I am: It brought me closer to it.
And this is only the beginning.






