Daniel Drexler, with an appointment in Córdoba to present The Voice of the Goddess Entropy

Daniel Drexler, with an appointment in Córdoba to present The Voice of the Goddess Entropy
Daniel Drexler, with an appointment in Córdoba to present The Voice of the Goddess Entropy

On Thursday, May 16, Daniel Drexler will return to Córdoba to present his album The voice of the goddess Entropyin which “he travels between order and chaos, reflecting on the fine biological and psychological balance that keeps us alive.”

The event will be at Club LeGrand (San Lorenzo 163), at 8 pm. And tickets are now available at alpogo.com.

Always according to an official presentation, with one foot in Latin American roots and the other in the sounds of the world, the work of the Uruguayan singer-songwriter moves through pop songs with influences from urban and rural folkloric genres of the Río de la Plata basin.

“His lyrics explore the world of poetry, as well as that of science and philosophy, focusing on the different areas of wonder of human reality, both on an emotional and rational level,” adds the support, while pointing out that, recently, Drexler was awarded the Uruguayan Music Graffiti Award in the Best Pop Single category for the song that gives its name to the album, which features collaboration with Kevin Johansen.

“The album goes from dance (pop, candombe, reggae, minimalism and orchestral arrangements) to existential doubts throughout eight sensitive own compositions where The Voice of the Goddess Entropy It has the special participation of Kevin Johansen and the Brazilian Vitor Ramil,” Daniel Drexler’s promoters then specify.

And they finish with that The voice of the Goddess Entropy It is a flag held high that fuels the strength to accept the inevitable.

“Science has great laws that make up a kind of Olympus of gods that govern the universe,” says Drexler, in turn.

“Among all these deities, there is one that particularly disturbs me, a law that most scientists and philosophers consider the supreme law, the only one that would not accept discussion: the law of entropy, which refers to the natural tendency toward disorder. , to chaos, to the absence of structure. The universe itself would thus be destined to an end of dispersion,” explains Drexler.

“However, life itself is a great generator of order, a titanic opponent of the law of entropy… Our DNA is a very complex system that allows the wonder of the existence of something as complex as a living being. He achieves this with notable success, but also with a strenuous effort that allows each of us to keep functioning for a very limited period of time,” he continues.

And finally he clarifies that he is not saying that it is not important to make the daily effort to organize our environment, to keep ourselves alive, to be happy, but he emphasizes that it seems essential not to forget that, despite the very dignified, beautiful and painful fight that we fight against entropy), in the end we will always, inexorably, lose. “Let us understand and accept that we are going to fight with joy, with affection, with love. Relax, we are going to dance as much as our body allows us, but at the end of this beautiful and painful dance that is life, the only voice that will be heard will be that of the goddess entropy,” he closes.

Daniel Drexler is a Uruguayan musician and composer with an outstanding career and multiple national and international awards. His work spans 30 years of experience, nine albums and a book where he analyzes the creative processes underlying his compositions.

More information

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