“Nota de Suicidio” plunges us into the darkest corners of the human mind. Porta and Soma craft a hip-hop monologue that feels like reading someone’s final letter out loud: the narrator drifts through rain-soaked streets, stands on a seventh-floor ledge, and imagines the blade’s kiss while replaying every regret. He says goodbye to his parents, bargains with the devil, and wonders whether anyone would even shed a tear. Each bar drips with exhaustion and self-loathing, revealing how depression can convince a person that the simplest escape is a fatal jump.
Beneath the despair flickers a fragile humanity. The voice on the track still apologizes, still hopes a single memory might keep him breathing, still searches for meaning in the silence between raindrops. Rather than glorifying death, the song exposes the suffocating weight of suicidal thoughts and invites listeners to recognize those whispers before they turn into screams. Porta’s unfiltered storytelling transforms private agony into a shared experience, urging empathy, conversation, and the life-saving power of being heard.