Righeira (album)

Many of the album's songs featured a futuristic and modern sound, including "Vamos a la playa" whose lyrics talks about the explosion of an atomic bomb.

[7] Writing for Rolling Stone in 2018, Eric Pfeil jokingly compared the cover of the album to "Nik Kershaw's hairspray collection", referring to the 1980s style.

[1] The album spawned the hit singles "Vamos a la playa" and "No tengo dinero" which helped Righeira with establishing a reputation as a modern dance duo.

[10][11] In his 2018 review of the album, author Diego Olivas of Fond/Sound wrote: On Righeira, gone were the themes of love, sex, or stuff of that nature ... Stefano Righi singing about nuclear annihilation, government surveillance, and crippling hypermodernism.

Sung completely in Spanish and featuring lyrics about running from a beach to avoid a nuclear bomb’s blast, it was quite possibly one of the bleakest hits to ever soundtrack a summer.

On tracks like "Jazz Musik", "Gli parlerò di te", and "Kon Tiki" you get the sense that all the crew involved really took umbrage to decadent Italy, there outré culture was selling, and they themselves didn’t feel privy to.