Broadcasting Sirens

Bio

Broadcasting Sirens:

Ramon Aguilar
Bidkar Grijalva

Broadcasting Sirens Live:

Ramon Aguilar: Vocals
Bidkar Grijalva: Guitar/synth
Bass: Daniel Corrales
Drums: Alex Gonzales
Synth/Sequences: Moises Grijalva

Drum machines, brocken industrial fans, and a dirty but clean synth lending its melody to a caressing voice. Your feet hurt from dancing a long night followed by comtemplation and sometimes effortless bliss. When you can accomodate all the elements with a sheekness, tenacity, and duality you have Broadcasting Sirens.

Broadcasting Sirens is an outfit from San Diego CA with roots from Europe, progressive America, and blood from Latin America. Covering such Topics as Love, Philosophy, and the grey areas of it all. In both English and Spanish they aspire not only to create but also conjure a hook that can carry through radio waves and dance clubs. A deadly combination for the receptive and allowing individual.

Ramon Aguilar on Vocals executes an androgynous whisper and a charismatic persona on stage followed by a gaze into the intrapersonal. Although his strength is seen as the Vocalist in the group, he lends his many talents in other areas of the songwriting. In a very subtle way he is able to adapt his voice to the many changing experiences expressed through the music.

Bidkar Grijalva is the second half of Broadcasting Sirens who lends his talents in various instruments during the songwriting and production. You will usually see him caress and obsess his attention to the guitar and keyboards in the live environment. His stylistic demeanor only adds on to the scenery and choice of words.

These two individuals have been writing music together for a long part of their youth but just recently acquired a sound to share with the public known as Broadcasting Sirens. Known for other songs like, “Don’t Say a Word” which can be found at Beatport.com accompanied by various remixes from PeakHourMUsic‘s best Dj’s and their ear catchy but grey hooded “Almanacer”, a tangent into the Spanish audience with a razor sharp whip.

Their Latest Single, “Beso De Sal” (Salty Kiss) is an example of the more electronic side of their Pallet, while still touching basis on their alternative foundation. The song speaks about how bitter sweet it feels to let go of the one you love and the taste of its vulnerability . Although deeply worded and intrapersonal, the song flows ever so effervescent to the sounds of a familiar dance beat that is lost somewhere between the past and the future but not the present.

Both Ramon and Bidkar can be seen in their Music Video interpretation of “Beso de Sal” which was shot in Mexicali B.C just recently under the Machin Productions Banner (production company which visually promotes the larger percent of the rave scene in Baja California, Mexico) . The video is their first of many to come and is an objective perspective of who the Band is in an up-close, magnetic, and semi controlled environment. It extends its hand to a new wave of Spanish Rock with an ear gratifying  dance feel which can sometimes feel hidden but definitely evident.