Silvana Estrada turns sadness into a character we can almost see. In Tristeza she talks directly to her own melancholy, asking it how long it plans to stick around and bargaining for small comforts: a sigh to soothe the verb amar and a careful kiss to ease the weight of missing someone who is gone. By personifying her sorrow, she turns an abstract feeling into a dialogue full of poetic imagery, letting us feel the push-and-pull between memories of lost love and the stubborn presence of pain that refuses to leave.
At its heart, the song is a gentle plea for emotional freedom. Estrada admits she once believed love would save her, yet now she begs sadness not to rewrite that truth. Each repeated line “Tristeza, déjame en paz” (Sadness, leave me in peace) is both a lament and a mantra, revealing resilience beneath the grief. The track becomes a tender lesson in self-compassion: acknowledge the hurt, speak to it, then kindly ask it to step aside so life, music, and dancing wind can flow again.
Silvana Estrada is a gifted Mexican musician and songwriter born in Coatepec, Veracruz in 1997. Raised by luthier parents, she grew up surrounded by music and discovered her passion early, embracing the Venezuelan cuatro as her signature instrument. Her soulful voice and heartfelt compositions blend jazz influences with Latin American folk traditions, inspired by legends like Billie Holiday and Chavela Vargas.
Since 2017, Silvana has captivated audiences with her enchanting albums, including Marchita (2022), her acclaimed solo debut. She has collaborated with acclaimed artists such as Charlie Hunter, Natalia Lafourcade, and Mon Laferte, earning recognition like the Latin Grammy Award for Best New Artist in 2022. Silvana Estrada’s music is a beautiful journey through vulnerability and strength, connecting deeply with listeners around the world.