We discover BISAGRA who releases “Ojos Tristes” and is a black hole of dream pop that seduces and devours.



Grenada, October 2025

In Granada, a city that breathes art through the cracks and melancholy through the alleys, there is a duo that has learned to inhabit the border between noise and beauty.
They are called Bisagra, and with their new single “Ojos Tristes” they prove that dream pop can still be dangerous, dark and, above all, addictive.


Light, shadow and desire

“Ojos Tristes” is not just another track: it is an emotional descent, a vertigo wrapped in guitars that float and synthesizers that beat as if they had a pulse of their own.
The track, the second preview of their upcoming album (due in autumn 2025), confirms what many already sensed: Bisagra has reached a point of artistic maturity where the introspective becomes hypnotic.

The letter -“Those sad eyes, a deep sea and I sink…. A black hole that sucks me in “- is not a casual metaphor. It is the confession of an attraction that dazzles and destroys, a relationship that glows just before it implodes.
The green in those eyes is “hard dope,” and the desire becomes an emotional tide that sweeps to the bottom.


Sound as living matter

Since their formation in 2009, Gonzalo Jiménez and Jordan Montero have understood music as an emotional extension of their landscape: Granada, with its mixture of mysticism, decadence and broken light.
But in “Ojos Tristes” they go a step further. The duo has created an atmosphere reminiscent of Slowdive’s shoegaze, Beach House’s liquid dream pop, but with an electric and Andalusian pulse that belongs only to them.

The most admirable thing is that the whole process -production, recording and mastering- has been done entirely by the band.
There are no foreign hands, no external filters: just the raw sound of two underground alchemists who are enough to build their own universe.

And it shows.
Each guitar layer, each vocal echo, each synthesizer seems to respond to an inner logic, a kind of sound architecture in which fragility coexists with the storm.


Bisagra, emotional geometry of Granada

Bisagra does not seek perfection, but intensity.
Their music is the place where melancholy mixes with electricity, where introspection becomes physical.
In “Patina o muere”, their previous advance, they roared from urgency; in “Ojos Tristes”, they float from the wound.
Both pieces seem a prelude to an album that promises to capture that permanent contradiction that defines their work: the beauty of sinking a little deeper, only to shine again.

Granada has given great names to Spanish alternative pop, but Bisagra belongs to that generation that no longer copies or pays homage, but reinvents its own myth, with identity, courage and a production as handcrafted as sophisticated.


“Ojos Tristes” now available

The single is now available on all digital platforms, accompanied by a minimalist visual that reinforces the feeling of immersion.
It is not a song to listen to at any time, but to stop the day and let it swallow you up.
Because if Bisagra achieves anything with this new release is to remind us that, deep down, sadness can also dance.