

(laughs.) I didn't have any idea who it was - til later on. SS: Yeah, I started going over there to play songs until this guy'd come in, and we'd have a little disagreement - and I'd win. He knew he was going to do something to him. That's what he was going to do.ĬD: I don't think Terry knew that yet, right? And sometimes Charles Manson would be there.ĬD: He was trying to get signed by Terry, right? He'd come over and be at my house, and I'd go over to his house. On the intersection of Doris Day, Sly Stone, Charles Manson,Terry Melcher (who was murderedtargeted by the Manson family), and the song “Que Sera Sera” (which was a hit for Day and a song Stone covered on his album, Fresh.ĬD: You were signed to Epic, right? And Terry Melcher was [Doris Day's} son, and an A&R guy at Columbia.


Soy el fuego que arde tu piel Soy el agua que mata tu sedĭices tú: "Mi tesoro, basta con mirarlo y tuyo será, y tuyo será.Worlds collide: Manson and Stone in the same room? You say: “My treasure you just need to admire and yours it will be, and yours it will be.”

Until that day comes, study up on the lyrics.Įnglish translation, courtesy of Genius: I am the fire that burns your skin Here's to hearing "Tuyo" ten more times when season 2 of Narcos: Mexico drops on Netflix on February 13. She was wrong, of course, as it became her theme song, and she sang it thousands of time. Above all, this stanza paints Escobar as an inescapable force of nature on which people have come to rely as they would on fire, or on water. Que sera sera is often interpreted as meaning whatever will be, will be.Que sera sera is a phrase that one might speak when he is resigned to a situation or is at peace with whatever outcome may come about from a situation.Que sera sera is a phrase that carries the connotation of leaving one’s life in the hands of fate. Doris Day, Que Sera Sera, a song she so disliked she didn’t want to record it. The song's opening lines, "I am the fire that burns your skin / I am the water that kills your thirst," capture Escobar's duality as a provider and as a danger. Using figurative language, the lyrics conjure up Escobar as a powerful, passionate, and problematic figure. Instead of creating a sonic tribute to the '80s, when the show is set, Amarante channeled the love songs of Escobar's mother's era. She narrates the process of raising the "boy that would become a monster," as NPR put it. Brazilian singer-songwriter Rodrigo Amarante wrote "Tuyo" keeping in mind Pablo Escobar, the notorious cocaine trafficker who was the focus of Narcos's first two seasons.Īccording to NPR, Amarante specifically wrote "Tuyo" from the perspective of Escobar's mother. "Tuyo" may sound like a wedding-appropriate love song, but "Tuyo" was actually crafted specifically for Narcos. The iconic song Que Ser, Ser sung by American singer and actress Doris Day is based on the philosophy that there are some realities in our personal futures which are outside of our control. Behind Rosalía and J Balvin's "Con Altura" Lyrics
