Dylan León Masa, better known as Dillomreleased this Saturday a controversial phrase from the stage of Cosquín Rockintended for the Minister of Economy, Luis Caputo. She did it while covering the song Sr. Cobranza, which the band Las Manos de Filippi released in the late nineties on the album “Arriba las manos, esto es el Estado.”
“I move here, I move there, They have to kill Caputo in the square“, recited the singer born in Once 23 years ago and raised in Colegiales, from the North stage of the traditional music festival that takes place annually in that city in the province of Córdoba.
In the original song, the band led by Carlos “Cabra” de Vega made a deep criticism of Carlos Menem’s management and, in the section that Dillom used, he pointed directly at Domingo Cavallo following his first stint at the Ministry of Economy. “Norma Plá has to kill Cavallo,” was the phrase that completed the first stanza.
Dillon rose to fame in 2018 with the song Drippin, which he produced. Then followed Superglue, together with the musician Ill Quentín, and his session with Bizarrap.
However, the singer, who has been playing bass since he was 9 years old, had been working in the field of music since 2015, producing songs at FL Studio, in Villa 31, where he arrived through MH, a kid he met in the square where he used to stop. There he became the beatmaker and DJ of the group La 31.
This Saturday night, your name It became a trend on the networksfollowing directly targeting the current head of the Treasury Palace with that phrase before a crowd in Cosquín.
Lali Espósito’s message in Cosquín following a new crossing with Milei: “For those who are antipatriate”
Lali Esposito was another of the artists who added a political seasoning to his presentation in Cosquín Rock. He did it following Javier Milei reposted a user’s publication questioning his participation in that festival.
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The singer sent an encrypted message to Milei following a repost on the President’s networks for her performance at Cosquín Rock.
Before starting one of the songs in her repertoire, the former Casi Ángeles dedicated a few minutes to making a reflection that raised her audience on several occasions. “This is a very special show for me because I am not only fulfilling a dream as an artist to be at such an event. Everything that happens to the artist is a collective matter and does not depend only on the artist, it is purely on the public. It is not demagoguery. That’s what I want to celebrate today,” she began.
“I thought regarding a lot of things to say. You imagine the context. The most important thing, at least for me, is that this party that we Argentines arethis union that generates art, music, culture, no one is ever going to take it away from us”, he emphasized, provoking the first ovation from his people.
Then, he completed: “This song is for the liars, the stupid, the bad people, the ones who don’t value, the anti-patriarch… Everyone.”
Milei, in her account X (formerly Twitter), where he has more than two million followers, supported a user’s message once morest the singer. “How dangerous, how sad,” wrote the Internet user next to the publication of the Discipline interpreter, alluding to the message that the singer had published on that social network on August 13, the date on which the result of the Elections was known. Primary, Open, Simultaneous and Compulsory (PASO).
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The singer changed the lyrics to her song “Who are they?” following receiving new questions from Javier Milei on networks.
In another part of her show, the artist who recently confirmed her romance with Pedro Rosemblat also changed the lyrics of one of her songs. “That I smoke, that I live, that I say, that I drink, that I have kissed so many,” reads the original version of “Who are they?”
Tonight, Lali sang “that if I smoke, that if I live, that if I drink, that if I live from the State”, getting a standing ovation from the people.