Oscar Cirac Molina, often referred to as Oscar. C. goes into the great unknown with "Remember", which marks his full-on rock ballad debut, and what we have is a love letter to hair metal legends of the ’80s and ’90s in its most pure form. It’s evident that this song is an unabashed shout of joy for being in love, played with heart and generously sprinkled with the sort of glorious accidents and reckless energy only a band of fantastic people could create.
"Remember", thrums with a reflective pulse, but it will not feel like a retro retread. The way Oscar does it, there's something undeniably human. C. embraces the flaws, permitting the song to breathe and stumble in all the right ways. The guitars fly and crunch with unapologetic swagger, the rhythm section gallops like a stampede, and the vocals bear the sincerity of someone who grew up dreaming in power chords and soaring choruses.
What distinguishes "Remember" is not technical perfection, it’s spirit. It’s a shout across decades, a tribute to the giants who defined a generation as it stakes its own claim with authority as a modern rock anthem. You can sense the brotherhood of Oscar. C. and his bandmates have a live-wire spirit pulsing through every bar and beat.
In a world that frequently overproduces and overpolishes, "Remember" is refreshingly human, messy, exuberant, and full of heart. Oscar. C. breathes a track that manages to honor the past and sing in praise of the present, reassuring us that rock’s golden spirit is not gone, but alive, well, and blissfully imperfect.
