Rastro translates to 'trace', 'trail', or 'track'. It's a beautifully evocative word that suggests a lingering presence or following closely behind someone.
In the song, the line "Eu posso ser teu rastro" (I can be your trace/trail) expresses a deep desire for connection and devotion. It implies wanting to be so intimately linked with the other person that you follow their every step, leaving a mark wherever they go, making it a poetic and memorable choice.
“Lisboa” is a heartfelt conversation between two lovers who crave nothing more than each other’s closeness. Over a gentle, folk-pop groove, the singers trade pleas and promises that turn the living-room floor into their whole universe. They imagine throwing away the map, forgetting the road, and staying wrapped in that one perfect moment where distance disappears and desire feels almost painful.
The lyrics circle around a single wish: tell me it’s real, and I will give you my best. With playful insistence, they mix tenderness (“I can be your shadow”) with playful urgency (“I want you in my mouth”), capturing the dizzy rush of new love that is equal parts romance and hunger. “Lisboa” is less about the Portuguese capital and more about the journey inward, where two hearts decide to stop wandering and finally say yes to loving, right here, right now.