Peruvian Renaissance Jaime Travezán returns with his new single, “Tribal Trouble,” a bold move into the spotlight. The song is an odyssey. It thrums with life, a rough and beautiful thread that has braided together far-flung continents, cultures, and centuries for thousands of years. A deep-blues shudder of hip-shaking resonance with a fusion of Eastern mysticism and African-rooted rhythm, Tribal Trouble is the type of song that seizes your spine and refuses to release it.
"Tribal Trouble" recorded at the sunny Mediterranean port of Barcelona, seems to represent a sort of culminating immersive sound. This single's distinction is how it echoes Jaime’s specific background. Long before music, Travezán made a name for himself through his image-making, photographing darling subjects from Sting to Pedro Almodóvar, documenting raw moments in world history, from the glamorous to the war-torn. That same eye of the storyteller lives on in "Tribal Trouble" and feels the tension, the elegance, the humanity. Each detail feels painstakingly chosen not just for tone but for feeling.
There’s a visual aspect to the song that unfurls like a photograph, rich in shadow and light, motion and stillness. On a crowded dancefloor or lost in headphones, however, you experience it, Tribal Trouble invites you to move, reflect, and connect to something bigger.”
Jaime Travezán is forging paths between spheres and creating tapestries of sound that belittle the notion of genre. "Tribal Trouble" isn’t to be categorized. It’s here to be felt. So hit play, shut your eyes, and let the rhythm take over.