Buscabulla
Buscabulla is a Puerto Rican experimental pop duo formed in 2011 by musicians Raquel Berrios and Luis Alfredo del Valle, who met in New York City's indie scene while pursuing separate creative paths.[1][2] The project's name derives from Puerto Rican slang for "troublemaker," encapsulating the pair's blend of mellow Caribbean influences with subversive electronic experimentation.[3][4] Berrios and Del Valle, partners in both music and life, initially based the project in Brooklyn before relocating to Puerto Rico, where they drew inspiration from the island's cultural rhythms and post-hurricane resilience.[5] Their sound fuses synth-heavy electropop, disco, house elements, and Latin styles like salsa and '80s Argentinian rock with live instrumentation, creating atmospheric tracks that explore themes of love, identity, and displacement.[4][6] Buscabulla gained early recognition with their self-titled EP in 2014, produced by Dev Hynes and released via Kitsuné Music, followed by EP II in 2017 on Baby Making Music.[4] Their debut full-length album, Regresa (2020), marked a thematic return to Puerto Rican roots amid personal and regional upheaval, while their sophomore effort Se Amaba Así (2025), released through Domino Recording Company, delves into the raw vulnerabilities of long-term relationships through Caribbean-inflected grooves.[7][8] Notable collaborations include a feature on Bad Bunny's track "Andrea" from Un Verano Sin Ti (2022), highlighting their influence in broader Latin indie circles.[9] The duo has cultivated an international following through live performances and a distinctive visual aesthetic tied to Berrios's background in textile design.[10]Members
Raquel Berrios
Raquel Berrios is a Puerto Rican singer, textile designer, and co-founder of the musical duo Buscabulla, where she serves as the primary vocalist and contributes to songwriting and visual aesthetics.[11][12] Born and raised in Trujillo Alto, a municipality ten minutes from San Juan, Berrios grew up immersed in diverse musical influences from her father, including salsa, calypso, Bob Dylan, and the Puerto Rican cuatro.[13][14] Berrios pursued formal education in design, graduating with a liberal arts degree from the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD).[15] Initially studying architecture, she transitioned into textile design, working in professional offices before recognizing her deeper interest lay in artistic self-expression beyond structured design roles.[16] In New York City, where she relocated from Puerto Rico, Berrios established a career as a textile designer while collecting Latin American records and honing her musical interests independently.[17][12] In 2011, Berrios met Luis Alfredo Del Valle in New York City, forming the creative partnership that birthed Buscabulla; their collaboration blended her vocal style—rooted in Caribbean rhythms and experimental pop—with his production expertise, yielding a signature tropical synth-pop sound.[18] As the duo's frontwoman, Berrios has shaped Buscabulla's thematic depth, drawing from personal experiences of displacement, identity, and return to Puerto Rico, where the pair relocated in 2018 amid the island's economic and post-hurricane challenges.[19] Her multifaceted role extends to textile and visual design for the band's projects, reflecting a holistic approach to artistry learned through iterative, hands-on practice rather than formal musical training.[11][20]Luis Alfredo Del Valle
Luis Alfredo Del Valle Collazo is a Puerto Rican musician, producer, and multi-instrumentalist best known as co-founder of the indie pop duo Buscabulla alongside his wife and creative partner, vocalist Raquel Berrios.[3] Born in Ponce, Puerto Rico, Del Valle grew up on the island before relocating to New York City, where he and Berrios, whom he first encountered during their teenage years at a party in Puerto Rico, reconnected and began collaborating musically around 2011.[13] [21] In Buscabulla, formed in 2014, Del Valle primarily handles musical composition, production, and instrumentation, transforming Berrios' lyrics and vocal performances into the duo's signature tropical synth-pop sound, often incorporating elements like synths, percussion, and electronic beats to evoke emotional depth and cultural resonance.[3] [5] His production approach emphasizes authenticity, as seen in albums like Regresa (2020), where he layered personal narratives with sonic textures reflecting Puerto Rican identity and post-hurricane recovery.[5] Del Valle and Berrios relocated from New York to Puerto Rico in 2017, motivated by the devastation from Hurricanes Irma and Maria, which profoundly influenced Buscabulla's thematic focus on home, resilience, and relational intimacy—evident in their 2025 album Se Amaba Así, which draws from the couple's own relational challenges.[5] [21] As a couple married for over a decade, their partnership blends artistic and personal elements, with Del Valle often credited for engineering the duo's live performances and recordings that prioritize raw emotional expression over polished commercialism.[10][21]History
Formation and early career (2014–2016)
Buscabulla, the musical project of Puerto Rican-born collaborators Raquel Berrios and Luis Alfredo Del Valle, who met in New York City in 2011 and began working together as a duo, gained initial visibility through their debut self-titled EP released on October 7, 2014, via the French label Kitsuné Musique.[22][23] The four-track EP, co-produced by English musician Dev Hynes (known as Blood Orange), featured synth-pop tracks such as "Caer," "Métele," "Sono," and "Bicho," blending electronic elements with Berrios's vocals and Del Valle's production.[24][25] The EP's release marked Buscabulla's entry into the indie and electronic music scenes, with promotional efforts including a music video for "Sono" directed and shared via their official channels in September 2014.[26] Based in Brooklyn, the duo continued developing their sound during 2015 and 2016, focusing on live performances and building international interest, as evidenced by their announcement of a debut show in Chile in July 2016.[27] These early years established their experimental pop style, drawing from tropical and synth influences, while they remained independent before signing with subsequent labels.[28]Return to Puerto Rico and Regresa (2017–2021)
In late 2017, following the devastation wrought by Hurricane Maria on September 20, which caused widespread power outages, flooding, and over 3,000 deaths in Puerto Rico according to official estimates, Buscabulla members Raquel Berrios and Luis Alfredo Del Valle relocated from New York City to their native island.[5] [29] The duo, who had been based in Brooklyn since forming in 2014, organized a farewell benefit concert in New York on January 26, 2018, to support hurricane relief efforts before fully committing to the move.[29] This return aligned with a broader diaspora response to the crisis, as many Puerto Ricans sought to contribute to rebuilding amid federal aid delays and infrastructure failures.[30] Settling in Puerto Rico, Berrios and Del Valle established a home studio, where they channeled the island's post-disaster realities—marked by economic strain, blackouts, and cultural resilience—into their music production.[31] Over the next two years, they developed material reflecting personal and collective themes of displacement and reclamation, releasing singles like "Vámono" as anthems urging action and unity for Puerto Rico's recovery.[32] The process emphasized analog recording techniques, such as miking instruments directly to tape before digital integration, to capture raw emotional textures amid ongoing challenges like sporadic power and isolation.[6] Their debut full-length album, Regresa—translating to "return" in Spanish—was recorded entirely in this Puerto Rican home setup and released on May 8, 2020, via Ribbon Music.[33] [34] The 10-track project, spanning 30 minutes and 53 seconds, explores angst, loss, and bittersweet introspection through synth-pop infused with salsa and electronic elements, directly inspired by their homecoming to a "devastated" landscape.[5] [35] Accompanying the release was a mini-documentary of the same name, chronicling their relocation journey and the album's genesis amid Hurricane Maria's aftermath.[36] The timing coincided with the global COVID-19 lockdowns, amplifying its themes of isolation and endurance as Puerto Rico faced renewed vulnerabilities.[37]Se Amaba Así and recent developments (2022–present)
In 2022, Buscabulla contributed vocals to Bad Bunny's track "Andrea" from the album Un Verano Sin Ti, a collaboration that highlighted the role of pop music in addressing social awareness issues such as gender-based violence. The song, released on May 6, 2022, featured Berrios' harmonies alongside Bad Bunny's narrative of a woman's experiences with abuse, marking a departure from the duo's prior work by integrating into a major commercial release that debuted at number one on the Billboard 200. Following this, Buscabulla entered a period of creative refinement, releasing the single "11:11" on November 11, 2024, which previewed their evolving sound with introspective lyrics and synth-driven production. In early 2025, they announced their sophomore studio album, Se Amaba Así, slated for release on June 13, 2025, via Domino Recording Company; the title, translating roughly to "the way it was loved," reflects an examination of relational friction and intimacy in long-term partnerships, drawn directly from Berrios and Del Valle's personal marital dynamics.[38] The 10-track album includes lead single "El Camino," released March 25, 2025, alongside subsequent singles "Te Fuiste," "Miraverahí" (June 12, 2025), and tracks like "Incrédula," "Mi Marido," "Mortal," and "De Lejito," blending tropical synth-pop with raw emotional vulnerability.[39] Critics noted the record's atmospheric grooves and inventive arrangements as a maturation from their debut, with Pitchfork praising its "smoldering synth-pop" for capturing "a moment of friction" in the duo's relationship without sensationalism.[40] To promote Se Amaba Así, Buscabulla embarked on a U.S. headline tour starting June 19, 2025, in Miami at ZeyZey, with dates spanning cities including Los Angeles (July 3 at The Belasco) and concluding later that summer; the performances emphasized live renditions of new material alongside catalog staples, drawing on their prior experience opening for Bad Bunny's 2022 World's Hottest Tour.[41] As of October 2025, no further albums or major tours have been announced, though the duo has expressed intent to continue exploring personal themes amid ongoing regional performances in Puerto Rico and Latin America.[42]Musical style and influences
Core elements and production techniques
Buscabulla's music centers on a synth-driven fusion of electropop, disco, and house elements with Caribbean and Latin rhythms, including salsa, bolero, plena, guajira, bachata, and reggaeton influences, yielding smooth, tropical beats overlaid with ethereal vocals and dreamy pop structures.[6][43][37] This approach integrates sturdy percussion patterns, funk grooves, and experimental electronic textures, often evoking diasporic Puerto Rican pride through stacked sonic layers that blend vaporwave aesthetics with traditional folk motifs.[37][6] Luis Alfredo Del Valle oversees production, employing home studio methods with Logic Pro X as the primary DAW, alongside synthesizers like the Korg MS-20 Mini, Korg Poly-800, and Teenage Engineering OP-1 for melodic and textural foundations.[44] Techniques emphasize sampling of Latin percussion and instrumentation, live tracking of piano, bass, drums, and guitar via microphones such as the Shure SM7B paired with preamps like the Art Tube Pac, and effects processing including Valhalla VintageVerb for reverb, Waves CLA-2A compression, and filters or distortion for depth.[44][6] Analog tape recording is occasionally used before digitization to impart warmth, while plugins emulate vintage synths like the Roland Juno.[6][44] The duo's process typically initiates with Raquel Berrios crafting chord progressions, lyrics, or conceptual sketches—such as metallic or underwater timbres—via voice memos or basic keyboards like the Casio WK-210, followed by Del Valle's layering of electronic and acoustic components for a hybrid organic-digital feel.[44][6] Albums like Regresa (2020) were recorded in Puerto Rico with intuitive, location-specific intuition, incorporating orchestral swells and external mixing by Patrick Wimberly to amplify rhythmic authenticity.[43] In contrast, Se Amaba Así (2025) expands the palette with violins and Spanish guitars to heighten emotional gravity, balancing modern synth-pop with classic Latin ballad sensibilities.[3]Thematic content and lyrical focus
Buscabulla's lyrics, predominantly authored by vocalist Raquel Berrios, are delivered exclusively in Spanish to honor their Puerto Rican heritage and evoke cultural intimacy.[45] Berrios' writing often adopts a first-person perspective, blending inner emotional landscapes with external observations of turmoil, as seen in early works that homage roots through nostalgic and resistant tones.[46] This approach privileges raw vulnerability over abstraction, using metaphorical language to navigate personal and collective experiences without overt didacticism.[47] The debut album Regresa (2020) foregrounds themes of displacement, homecoming, and post-disaster resilience, inspired by the duo's relocation to Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria devastated the island on September 20, 2017.[5] Tracks like "Vámono" (released September 25, 2019) articulate jubilant resistance and wistful pleas for communal aid amid cultural upheaval, questioning "Quien me va ayudar?" to underscore isolation and defiance.[48] Broader motifs include grief over natural and economic exploitation, balanced by bittersweet hope and calls to action, shifting from upbeat urgency to introspective surrender in songs like "No Sabemos."[49][50] These elements reflect a causal interplay between personal return and societal reckoning, prioritizing empirical ties to Puerto Rico's 2017-2018 recovery context over romanticized narratives.[51] In contrast, the sophomore album Se Amaba Así (released June 13, 2025) pivots to romantic introspection, examining friction, vulnerability, and the "dark side" of interpersonal love within Berrios and producer Luis Alfredo Del Valle's long-term partnership.[21] Berrios frames the title track as a reflection on past relational intensities—"that's how we used to love"—drawing from her parents' observed dynamics and the duo's own crises, marking a departure from external gazes to mutual relational candor.[52] Themes of cathartic honesty and efforts to sustain romance emerge organically during creation, with lyrics probing doubt, loss, and transmutation, as in "Te Fuiste" and "Incrédula," without resolving into facile optimism.[3] This focus on "hardcore feelings" and relational upheaval underscores a truth-seeking lens on love's impermanence, informed by the challenges of blending artistry and partnership.[53][40] Across their catalog, Buscabulla's lyrical emphasis resists sanitized portrayals, favoring empirical emotional realism—whether cultural devastation or intimate discord—over performative uplift, with Berrios' delivery amplifying themes through evocative, non-literal phrasing that invites listener inference.[54][47]Discography
Studio albums
Regresa, Buscabulla's debut studio album, was released on May 8, 2020, by Domino Recording Company.[33][55] Recorded entirely in the duo's home studio in Puerto Rico after their relocation from New York City in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria in 2017, the album comprises nine tracks that blend synth-pop, indie electronic, and Latin rhythms.[5][34] Key tracks include "Vámono," "La Fiebre," and "Mío," which address themes of emotional return, personal angst, and relational tension, reflecting the title's meaning of "return" or "come back."[56]| Title | Release date | Label | Tracks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Regresa | May 8, 2020 | Domino Recording Company | 9 |
| Title | Release date | Label | Tracks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Se Amaba Así | June 13, 2025 | Domino Recording Company | 8 |