A decade of a musical career rarely ends with an uplifting documentary testimony. Even more rarely does such a document become a transformative experience for those who dare to listen to it. Década En Directo by Aura Noctis embodies precisely this rare scenario—an album born from the celebration of the collective’s ten-year anniversary and the reissue of live material from 2015, becomes not so much a nostalgic glance backward, but rather a bold affirmation of the present moment.
It all began ten years ago in the space of Espacio Ronda, when Carmen and Susana—a modest duo of oboe and cello—performed before an audience for the first time. That concert night gave birth to the album en Directo, which became the primary source of sonic material. Ten years later, the collective has evolved: the duo was joined by vocalists and percussionists (Bea, Ana, Mar, Rubén, and Sergi). Década En Directo reflects this transformation—nine tracks, divided into six instrumental and three vocal compositions: Drops, Stay, Cracovia, Descubre, Solsticio, Siberia, Cantar de las Hojas, Viajes, Omnia.
Of course, classical music has the reputation of being a boring and cold art form, accessible only to devoted scholars. This wall of resistance, erected by generations of listeners, is rigidly cemented in the collective consciousness. Yet classical music affects a person regardless of their preconceived beliefs—it penetrates, captivates, rewrites the internal landscape of perception. I came to this album with the disposition of a skeptic, considering such music to be an alien entity, irrelevant to me. Década En Directo shattered that conviction. Here sorcery echoes—literal magic, embodied in vibrating strings. Euphoria and rapture permeate every track, creating the effect of temporal displacement into a fairy-tale dimension, from which consciousness refuses to return.
Drops opens the album with the delicacy of a surgeon, incising the most vulnerable layers of human perception. Quick, pulsating piano sounds—the tremolo technique—resonate with an almost magical melody of bar chimes, creating a fairy-tale synergy. This is the beginning of a journey that demands complete surrender to sound.
Cracovia captivates with its clear, light, and tender articulation of the cello, which sounds like the voice of a spirit lost between worlds. The composition possesses a melancholic character, bordering on darkness, yet the quality of performance and hushed tonality will touch the most remote strings of the human psyche. The emotional weight here is sufficient to leave deep imprints of minor and mournful feelings that vibrate in memory long after the track concludes.
Cantar de las Hojas appears as a calm, lulling lullaby that soothes the listener’s nervous system. Here, the vocals become the primary instrument, carrying astonishing transitions between tonalities, high tenor and piercing sensitivity create an atmosphere of deep serenity.
Omnia continues the magical thread of the album’s fabric, captivating the listener with no less intensity than the preceding tracks. Here, the cello functions as a portal, drawing consciousness into an unexplored fantastic land, where with time every hidden corner becomes familiar, every sound—a recognized symbol of inner cosmos.
If the rest of the album unfolds with relative ease, then Viajes greets the listener with a more saturated, heavy atmosphere, yet this is merely the opening gesture. By the middle of the composition, it makes a return to the album’s concept, becoming almost weightless, penetrating consciousness without resistance, leaving a sense of freedom and lightness toward which the human soul strives throughout life.
Classical music functions in culture as a metaphor for alienation, as a symbol of social stratification, as a mark of elitism. Yet this paradigm is erroneous. Classical music is music just like punk, like electronic, like folk. The difference lies only in the means of expression, in the architecture of sound, in the philosophical approach to organizing acoustic material. Consumers of this genre need not be experts in all sorts of musical terminology; they need not know what modulation or fugue is to understand the music. All that is required is a desire to listen, a readiness for immersion, openness of perception.
If you still regard classical music as an unreachable summit, then Aura Noctis presents itself as the optimal entry point into this genre. There is no need here to delve into the historical layers of each composition’s creation, into the biographical details of composers, or into archival documents. The music itself becomes a guide, itself drawing the listener into its world, and it is guaranteed that within the very first seconds of listening, vivid images and spontaneous associations will materialize in your mind. With hearing or without it, with knowledge or without it—Década En Directo will become a conductor into the dimension of pure experience.
Classical music is frightening only insofar as the unknown frightens. The melancholy that people attribute to this genre exists only in the imagination of those who fear hearing it. The problem always lies in beginning, in overcoming the psychological barrier of the first sound. Perhaps it is precisely Aura Noctis that will become the bridge allowing you to begin a dialogue with instrumental music. This music captivates through its subtlety and lightness, its ability to speak about the unspeakable.
Even if skepticism remains an unshakable conviction, I am absolutely certain that there are people ready for such an experience. Simply listen—and take my word for it: classical music will become your instrument of relaxation, your saving anchor in the storms of everyday life. Década En Directo is devoid of heavy percussion instruments, fast martial rhythms, that stylistic aggression which typically weighs down the perception of contemporary music. Here reigns harmony, balance, purity of sound.
Década En Directo is nine little stories, each with its own genre identity and its own unique plot. Each one touches, intrigues, then completely draws the listener into its world, forcing one to approach music with active ears and an open heart.
I hope that you will manage to open this album, immerse yourself in its depths, and begin listening to classical music from a new perspective—and not perceive it as a boring artifact of the past, but as a living, transformative experience of the present.