Frankie 5Ø3 puzzles a relationship out of delightful pop/hip-hop track “R0MP3 CAB3ZA”

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From pieces of hip-hop, pop, Spanish and his life, Frankie 5Ø3 has created a lovely puzzle of a song called “R0MP3 CAB3ZA.”

In the code of his personal naming convention, that translates to “Rompe Cabeza,” and the translation of that to English is “puzzle.”

And talk about puzzles, this one comes from life.

“There was a girl, and I wanted a relationship with her, so I made a song out of, basically that I wanted a relationship with her,” he said. “I’m talking about how I kind of notice everything and how I’m acting toward her, but she doesn’t really seem to get the hint.”

One piece of the puzzle is that he and she have been friends since they were children. Their families know each other and have always interacted, but more so recently.

“And that’s why it was kind of a little bit of a puzzle, because I was trying to figure it out without it being all complicated and everything.”

“R0MP3 CAB3ZA” is Frankie’s voice, in the borderland between tenor and baritone, singing in Spanish to a chiming pop melody over a hip-hop beat. It is very different from his previous work, which he created out of his passion for urban Latin and reggaeton.

“I wanted to make something different than what I had made prior. I wanted a different sound, so I aimed for that pop sound that’s really popular now. I felt comfortable with it.”

He comes by pop and hip-hop legitimately.

“I listened to a lot of pop growing up. I’ve listened to a lot of hip-hop — 50 Cent, Young Thug, all those guys that were popular when I was growing up.”

Frankie was born in Lansdowne, Virginia, but his parents are from El Salvador (the 5Ø3 in his artist name is the phone code for El Salvador). Latin music and reggaeton, which originated in Central America, are in his blood.

“I still plan on making a lot of reggaeton, but I like the change of pace that this song brought, because I want to make more than just one or two genres. I want to explore every genre that I can make.”

Frankie’s ambition has always been to be huge in Central and South America, but his ambition has expanded since releasing his 13-track Latin/reggaeton album 3L NIÑ0 P03TA earlier this year.

He recently traveled to El Salvador and played and recorded some music. He also traveled to Japan, where he shot a video for “R0MP3 CAB3ZA,” which will be released in early to mid-October.

That was another piece of the puzzle for “R0MP3 CAB3ZA.” He wanted a sound, a neo vibe.

“And I thought that Tokyo, Japan, was a cool spot to record.”

“R0MP3 CAB3ZA” represents a turning point, not away from Latin and reggaeton, but toward the inclusion of pop and hip-hop. He also has played in an alt-rock band, but that has taken a back seat to his solo career.

“I like seeing where I can go with different genres of music. I don’t want to stick to just one thing.”

He is working on an EP, which will include “R0MPE CAB3ZA.”

“It will have sprinkles of what I’ve done before. I love reggaeton, I love Latin music, and it’s going to be in Spanish, but it will also have some little twists of hip-hop and other realms of music. My first album had a lot of reggaeton. That’s what I was aiming for, but I want to make sure that I express myself in every way I can. As long as it sounds good in the headphones, why not release it?”

As for the puzzle at the heart of “R0MP3 CAB3ZA,” the girl and the situation.

“It’s a song where a guy’s trying to show a girl that he’s interested but trying not to be too crazy direct about it. So I made a song,” he said.

“And I showed it to her. That’s kind of why I made it.”

She’s his girlfriend now.

Connect to Frankie 5Ø3 on all platforms for new music, videos, and social posts.

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Nelly Furtado says magazines used to “lighten” her “olive skin”

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Nelly Furtado has spoken about the ways magazines used to edit her images during her career in the early 2000s, saying they would “lighten” her “olive skin”.

In an interview with People, the singer shared that she was subject to “a lot of airbrushing” in editorial images during her early career. She also revealed that some publications would go as far as to change her skin tone, saying: “I have olive skin, and they’d kind of lighten my skin a lot in photos.”

Furtado also shared how they would edit the size of her hips. “They would always kind of cut off in editorials,” she said, resulting in her becoming “kind of angry about” the beauty standards set by the media.

Nelly Furtado
Nelly Furtado. Credit: Martin Philbey

However, the ‘Maneater’ singer shared that she “felt so lucky and blessed” to have had the support of her family during that time. “I always had such a good team around me, that was family,” she said. “My team around me felt so solid and really looking out for my best interests. And I think I was just raised right. My mom was really strong, and so is her mom, and her mom, and her mom – a very matriarchal family, in general, on both sides, all my grandmothers, and great-grandmothers.

“So I was given a really solid kind of sense of assertiveness, I’m going to call it. So that was a good tool for me to navigate the music industry. And I was given really solid advice from a young age, luckily, from very paternal sort of people around me. So I was lucky, I was one of the lucky ones.”

Furtado’s latest album ‘7’ was released on September 20, marking her first studio LP in seven years. Speaking to NME before its release, she said “I hadn’t set foot in a studio in about three years, but something told me I needed to get back in.”

Earlier this year, Furtado said that she thinks a potential Las Vegas residency with longtime collaborator Timbaland would be “really fun”. The two first worked together for her seminal third album from 2006, ‘Loose’. They later teamed up with Justin Timberlake on the 2007 hit ‘Give It To Me’ and most recently, last year’s ‘Keep Going Up’.

‘Loose’ spawned numerous hits for Furtado and Timbaland, including songs like ‘Maneater’, ‘Promiscuous’, ‘Say It Right’, ‘In God’s Hands’ and ‘All Good Things (Come To An End)’.

Speaking to NME, she said: “I think it would be really fun for Timbaland and I to do a Vegas residency of ‘Loose’. We could play the album from beginning to end, because I do think it captures the world we were in at the time.”

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